Guardian Farming April 2014

36
SIGN UP YOUR DAIRY REQUIREMENTS FOR NEXT SEASON AND BE IN TO WIN ONE OF SEVEN RURALCO SUPPLIER VOUCHER PRIZES OF $1,000!* DAIRY FARMERS: Order today and be in to win up to $7,000 in prizes CALL US NOW 0800 BUY ATS (287 289) * Terms and conditions apply www.ats.co.nz Photo: Donna Wylie Chanelle O’Sullivan is keeping rural mums connected with Farming Mums NZ Facebook page. Social media connections Pages 4-5 Farming GUARDIAN APRIL, 2014

description

Guardian Farming April

Transcript of Guardian Farming April 2014

Page 1: Guardian Farming April 2014

SIGN UP YOUR DAIRY REQUIREMENTS FOR NEXT SEASON AND BE IN TO WIN ONE OF SEVEN RURALCO SUPPLIER VOUCHER PRIZES OF $1,000!*

Dairy Farmers:Order today and be in to win up to $7,000 in prizes

CALL US NOW

0800 BUY ATS (287 289)

* Terms and conditions apply

www.ats.co.nz

ATS Guardian Solus_250x100mm_0214.indd 1 27/2/14 3:53:22 PM

Photo: Donna WylieChanelle O’Sullivan is keeping rural mums connected with Farming Mums NZ Facebook page.

Social media connections Pages 4-5

FarmingGUARDIAN

APRIL, 2014

Page 2: Guardian Farming April 2014

CONTACTSWe appreciate your feedback.

EditorEmail your comments to [email protected] or phone 03 307 7971.

Advertising Email [email protected] or phone 03 307 7936.

PostAshburton Guardian, PO Box 77, Ashburton.

This month we look at the role social media is playing in keeping

rural women in touch, with the inspirational story of Chanelle O’Sullivan – a busy young mum who saw a need and rose to the occasion.

In recent years there has been a lot of attention paid to mental health in the rural sector, but it has largely been centred on men. Federated Farmers has worked hard to highlight the alarming suicide rates for farmers. However, Chanelle discovered there are a lot of women on farms also suffering from depression.

We look at the journey the committee underwent to get the piped Valetta Irrigation scheme open. It is the first of its type in Mid Canterbury.

We also have a great line up of columnists. Mary Ralston talks about the role of wetlands in the environment and Sheryl Stivens has some great tips for recycling in our green farming feature.

Greg Martin takes us into the back country – on a hunting trip with overseas visitors, and takes in the scenery from their perspective in his Brass and Feathers column. Longtime columnist John Leadley tackles the falling rate of home ownership and law and order in the Ashburton district.

Chris Murdoch broaches the subject of farm prices in his discussion on rural real estate, with reference to the $70 million a Mid Canterbury property fetched at auction recently.

Farm forestry on irrigated properties is also on the agenda, with details on an upcoming field day on page 25.

We are always looking for story ideas, and want to know what our readers would like us to cover. Feel free to contact us with your ideas.

The Ashburton district’s home-ownership rates and alcohol policies are causing concerns.

P18

COMMENT FROM EDITOR

Arab

le P

loug

h Pa

rts Lemken Shins

The place where farmers get their quality agricultural replacement parts and equipment

Vogel & Noot Shares

Gregorie Besson Shares

Vogel & Noot Points

Kuhn SkimmerMouldboard

Dale SharesPlough Share

Rebuilds Plough Shares Plough DiscsOverum Parts Gregoire Besson

Lemken reversible

points

Kverneland SharesKverneland

PointsDowdeswell

SharesLemkenShares

Culti

vatio

n Pa

rts

Sunfl ower &

Salford Points

Goliath PointsCast Points

Bellota Grubber Point

10’’ x 2’’ Coil Tines80 mm

Topdown Points

50 mm Topdown

PointsVibrofl ex

PointsYeoman Spring

Coil Tine Clamp

Yeoman Clamp

Vibrofl ex Legs

Maxitill Points

Jackpot Tines

Pan Buster Points

Vibrofl ex Springs

Bellota Grubber Point 12’’ x 2.5’’ S Tines

Goliath Legs

Goliath Springs

Vaderstad

Rexius Point

Kverneland/Accord

TS Coulter Point

Dale Shares

Lemken reversible

Lemken Terradisc

0800 4 PALMERS - 0800 472 563 - www.palmeragriparts.co.nz - 34 Robinson St, Riverside Industrial Park, Ashburton0800 4 PALMERS - 0800 472 563 - www.palmeragriparts.co.nz - 34 Robinson St, Riverside Industrial Park, Ashburton

15, 22 and 30-TonVertical/Horizontal

Hydraulic Log Splitter

Jackpot Tines

Goliath Legs

Goliath Springs

Kverneland/Kverneland/Accord

TS Coulter Point

0800 4 PALMERS - 0800 472 563 - www.palmeragriparts.co.nz - 34 Robinson St, Riverside Industrial Park, Ashburton0800 4 PALMERS - 0800 472 563 - www.palmeragriparts.co.nz - 34 Robinson St, Riverside Industrial Park, Ashburton

15, 22 and 30-TonVertical/Horizontal

Hydraulic Log Splitter

Caddle ramps. 3 size options available.

Taking foreign hunters into our back country makes for a satisfying experience.

P10

Healthy well-functioning wetlands can help farmers manage their pasture and infrastructure.

P7

John Leadley

RURAL COMMENT

Michelle Nelson

RURAL EDITOR

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

Around the world and at home, there are many ways to help keep the environment cleaner.

P21

Interest in the rural real estate market is high following the Ealing Pastures sale last month.

P26

Mary Ralston

FOREST AND BIRD

GregMartin

BRASS AND FEATHERS

Sheryl Stivens

MASTAGARD ASHBURTON

Chris Murdoch

PROPERTY BROKERS

Page 3: Guardian Farming April 2014

Valetta’s piped water scheme flows

flooringxtra.co.nz

Promotion expires 16/11/2013. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer & only available at participating stores. *Based on re-carpeting a 3 bedroom house incl. dining & hallway requiring 21blm of carpet on 9mm Natures Choice Underlay plus installation. Excludes door bars, uplifting, recycling, travel and other incidentals. See instore for details.

240 Burnett Street, Ashburton

Phone 308 0266www.flooringxtra.co.nz

flooringxtra.co.nz

Promotion expires 16/11/2013. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer & only available at participating stores. *Based on re-carpeting a 3 bedroom house incl. dining & hallway requiring 21blm of carpet on 9mm Natures Choice Underlay plus installation. Excludes door bars, uplifting, recycling, travel and other incidentals. See instore for details.

^Q CARD LENDING CRITERIA, FEES, TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY. *CAVALIER BREMWORTH IS NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES. OFFER AVAILABLE AT PARTICIPATING STORES. EXPIRES 30 JUNE 2013. TERMS & CONDITIONS APPLY.

ON PURCHASES $1000 & OVER.

FLOORINGXTRA.CO.NZ

flooringxtra.co.nz

Promotion expires 16/11/2013. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer & only available at participating stores. *Based on re-carpeting a 3 bedroom house incl. dining & hallway requiring 21blm of carpet on 9mm Natures Choice Underlay plus installation. Excludes door bars, uplifting, recycling, travel and other incidentals. See instore for details.

240 Burnett Street, Ashburton

Phone 308 0266www.flooringxtra.co.nz

flooringxtra.co.nz

Promotion expires 16/11/2013. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer & only available at participating stores. *Based on re-carpeting a 3 bedroom house incl. dining & hallway requiring 21blm of carpet on 9mm Natures Choice Underlay plus installation. Excludes door bars, uplifting, recycling, travel and other incidentals. See instore for details.

^Q CARD LENDING CRITERIA, FEES, TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY. *CAVALIER BREMWORTH IS NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES. OFFER AVAILABLE AT PARTICIPATING STORES. EXPIRES 30 JUNE 2013. TERMS & CONDITIONS APPLY.

ON PURCHASES $1000 & OVER.

FLOORINGXTRA.CO.NZ

flooringxtra.co.nz

Promotion expires 16/11/2013. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer & only available at participating stores. *Based on re-carpeting a 3 bedroom house incl. dining & hallway requiring 21blm of carpet on 9mm Natures Choice Underlay plus installation. Excludes door bars, uplifting, recycling, travel and other incidentals. See instore for details.

240 Burnett Street, Ashburton

Phone 308 0266www.flooringxtra.co.nz

flooringxtra.co.nz

Promotion expires 16/11/2013. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer & only available at participating stores. *Based on re-carpeting a 3 bedroom house incl. dining & hallway requiring 21blm of carpet on 9mm Natures Choice Underlay plus installation. Excludes door bars, uplifting, recycling, travel and other incidentals. See instore for details.

^Q CARD LENDING CRITERIA, FEES, TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY. *CAVALIER BREMWORTH IS NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES. OFFER AVAILABLE AT PARTICIPATING STORES. EXPIRES 30 JUNE 2013. TERMS & CONDITIONS APPLY.

ON PURCHASES $1000 & OVER.

FLOORINGXTRA.CO.NZ

flooringxtra.co.nz

Promotion expires 16/11/2013. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer & only available at participating stores. *Based on re-carpeting a 3 bedroom house incl. dining & hallway requiring 21blm of carpet on 9mm Natures Choice Underlay plus installation. Excludes door bars, uplifting, recycling, travel and other incidentals. See instore for details.

240 Burnett Street, Ashburton

Phone 308 0266www.flooringxtra.co.nz

flooringxtra.co.nz

Promotion expires 16/11/2013. Offers cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer & only available at participating stores. *Based on re-carpeting a 3 bedroom house incl. dining & hallway requiring 21blm of carpet on 9mm Natures Choice Underlay plus installation. Excludes door bars, uplifting, recycling, travel and other incidentals. See instore for details.

^Q CARD LENDING CRITERIA, FEES, TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY. *CAVALIER BREMWORTH IS NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES. OFFER AVAILABLE AT PARTICIPATING STORES. EXPIRES 30 JUNE 2013. TERMS & CONDITIONS APPLY.

ON PURCHASES $1000 & OVER.

FLOORINGXTRA.CO.NZ

Tidy up your farm houses with SKIP-2-IT Flooring Xtra.

CarpetCarpetstock $90

per MTR VinylVinylstock

$60per MTR

Come instore today to discuss your options. great stock specials available.

from

ENQUIRE NOWJacob Holdaway0274 225 464

FODDER BEET HARVESTING•Efficient, clean harvesting

•Capable of harvesting various row widths

•Grimme Harvester is well suited to Canterbury

conditions

CALL ME NOW 0274 225 464

ASHBURTON832 East St03 307 9911

CHRISTCHURCH 799 Jones Rd, Rolleston

03 349 4883

www.dne.co.nz 0800 432 633

GENUINE JOHN DEERE TRACTOR SEATSSNEVER SEEN BEFORE PRICES - GREAT TIME TO BUY!!!

$1,890.00*

*PRICES EXCLUDE GST

Super Air Comfort Seat Super Comfort Seat

$1,440.00*

Call us to enquire

about the full range

now $1850 exclnow $1400 excl

AL175598 AL175599

3www.guardianonline.co.nz

The story of piping the Valetta Irrigation Scheme has been a

long time in the making.The proposal to pipe the

scheme was first suggested in 2007 during an informal meeting.

The following year Aqualinc Research was hired to evaluate the proposal, and found a staggering 37 per cent (1.2 cumecs) of the water entering the open race was wasted, at a cost of about $14.4 million annually.

This equated to almost half the $31 million price tag, and the decision to proceed was made, with the rest of the scheme funded by the 41 shareholders.

“Looking back it was an embarrassment,” Valetta

Irrigation chairman Alistair Morrison said.

Gerard van den Bosch, general manager of Aquaduct and Bosch Irrigation, put together a proposal to import extruders from China to manufacture the 84 kilometres of plastic pipe required and incorporate hydro-generation into the scheme.

Aquaduct set up a portable plant which is operated 24 hours a day, churning out 1600mm plastic pipe up to 200m long for the scheme. The pop-up plant was the first of its type in the world. It cost around $250,000 to set up and can be relocated in a couple of months

The pipe was dragged on purpose-built trailers to nearby farms where the irrigation scheme was converted from open channels to pipe.

Making the pipe onsite was cheaper than transporting it in shorter lengths from factories farther afield and sped up installation time as fewer joins are necessary. On average every kilometre done, saved over a week’s welding time.

Bosch designed and built the entire piped system, which will include two small hydro-electricity plants that will generate two megawatts for the national grid.

The fall of the plains means water will be delivered from the Rangitata Diversion Race under pressure so farmers can run their centre pivot and lateral spray irrigators.

Productive land had been reclaimed from filling in the open races, and Valetta Irrigation had installed nine fire hydrants along the scheme.

Mr Morrison said other advantages of the piped scheme were the reduced fire risk from more irrigated land, increased productivity, the ability to sell water, and from a

farmer’s point of view to be able to turn water on and off via their smart phones.

The scheme was switched on in October, and officially opened last month.

The section of piping connecting the RDR to the piped scheme will be completed, and the turbines installed during the next few months.

Michelle Nelson

RURAL EDITOR

Valetta Irrigation chairman Alistair Morrison and Gerard van den Bosch, general manager of Aquaduct and Bosch Irrigation discuss the piped scheme with shareholders.

Photo: Michelle Nelson 210314-

MN-006

Page 4: Guardian Farming April 2014

Call Allan McCormick today on 307 0412 or email [email protected]

3 BAY• 3M Back

Height• 3.6M Front

Height• 4.5M Bays• 6M Deep• H5 Hi Strength

Poles• 0.9 kpa Snow

Load• High Wind• Zincalume

Steel

92 Dobson Street, AshburtonPhone 307 0412

Hours: Mon - Fri 7am - 5.30pm; Sat 8am - 12noon

WE’LL SEE YOU RIGHT

DARE TO COMPARE

Our every day price for kitset

CONDITIONS APPLY

$5,500.00+ GST?$5,500?$5,500?$5,500

3 BAY LEAN-TO FARM SHEDShed illustration only

Delivery Mid Canterbury FREE FREE Plans for Council Consent

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz4 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

Country links

From the Chatham Islands to Northland, a Mayfield mum is using

the power of social media to connect women in rural areas.

Chanelle O’Sullivan arrived in the district a year ago, with husband David and daughter Isabelle, who was just 12 months old at the time.

Chanelle grew up in suburban Auckland, but had always preferred country living.

“Farming was something I always wanted to do,” she said.

“I used to go on horse riding camps in the Waikato in school holidays, and worked on the farm.”

Armed with a certificate of agriculture, she upped stakes and headed for the Mackenzie Country to take up a position

on a station, overlooking Lake Pukaki.

While the view was idyllic, the owner of the property was something of a curmudgeon.

“He was a 60-year-old guy with two hip replacements – I lasted three months, which I thought was pretty good considering the previous guy only made it through one month.

“I had no chance to learn anything about deer – it was straight into the deer shed.”

Chanelle met David O’Sullivan at a Mackenzie Young Farmers meeting a month into her job.

After a stint on a dairy farm, she found herself back on a deer farm near Timaru. The O’Sullivan family now live on a Barford Road property which runs 3000 head of deer, 1000 sheep and some beef cattle.

Soon after arriving in the district, Chanelle took over the Farming Mums NZ Facebook page as an administrator.

“Another woman had been running the page, she put the call out for someone to take it on and I decided to pick it up,” she said.

At the time Farming Mums NZ was a closed page with about 100 members. Chanelle changed the format from a page to a group, which now counts more than 800 members and continues to grow by the day.

While in Wellington on a Federated Farmers leadership course last month, Chanelle met with representatives from Rural Women New Zealand to discuss the role of the page.

“They were really supportive, and said they would help where they could,” she said.

Since developing the concept in New Zealand, Chanelle has set up Farming Mums UK and Farming Mums.

“I did some research and couldn’t find anything like it in either country, there are about 50 members on each page,” she said.

“It can be difficult if you don’t know anyone, and there are a lot of mums working on farms, and others doing administrative stuff.

“We have one member who velvets 600 stags with two kids in a room off the deer

Keeping New Zealand’s rural mums in touch via Facebook is providing busy Mayfield mum, Chanelle O’Sullivan, a way to use her 21st-century skills.

Michelle Nelson

RURAL EDITOR

Chanelle O’Sullivan and daughter, Isabelle, at home in Mayfield.Photo: Michelle Nelson

Page 5: Guardian Farming April 2014

Smart Fuel Storage

Visit our website for a full list of products and features

Available in 1300, 2300, 4800 and 9500 litre diesel stations

Proudly made in New Zealand

Fully Compliant

Bunded

Optimum clean fuel

Easy and safe to fill and dispense

Minimise fuel theft

Also manufacturers of Waste Oil Tanks, Tanks for Adblue and Transportable Tanks

0800 473 226 www.sebco.co.nz

C-D Series from $111,999.00 E-D Series from 69,999.000

P-D Series from $74.999.000 T-D Series from $41,999.000

Built Smart, Built To Last, Built For You!

32 Robinson Street, PO Box 71, Ashburton | Ph: 03 308 4094 | CRAIG ALLEN 021 861 440 Email: [email protected] | Website: www.allencustomdrills.co.nz

Drill of the Month — H-D Series - Heavy Duty Air Seeder

• 5” OR 6” Row spacing• 3m to 6m rigid, folding to 3m transport width• Various bin options: Fertiliser, Insecticide and Slugbait• Crane options for loading up to 1000kg bags• H-D Series priced from $96,999.00

THE CHOICE IS YOURS…….

5www.guardianonline.co.nz

shed,” Chanelle said.The Farming Mums NZ

site is loaded with pictures of mothers with young babies in front packs and older children in strollers carrying out farming tasks.

“A lot of people still don’t live close enough to be able to use childcare centres,” Chanelle said.

“My nearest is at Hinds. I’ve just started taking Isabelle there once a week so she gets to spend time with children her own age.”

Chanelle controls the membership and the content of the page, and says sometimes personalities clash, but she is determined to remain neutral.

“If someone is stirring I delete them. Some people will say all sorts of things when they are hiding behind a computer.

Soon after taking over the page, Chanelle realised how many rural women were suffering from depression, or struggling with the isolation.

“You hear about men on farms suffering depression, but there’s a lot of women in the same boat,” she said. “There have been a few ask for help. Mothers of younger kids often find themselves home alone for long periods – women in town usually have a partner home in the evening but that’s not always the case on farms, especially in busy periods like calving or harvest time.”

Having a platform to share these feelings is important, and Chanelle tries

where possible to get some support for these people, whether that’s encouraging a neighbour to invite them for coffee, or delivering some home baking.

Future projects include a calendar, and a cookbook.

“I’m hoping to include all 12 regions, at the moment I’m trying to appoint a co-ordinator for each region to run with it.”

Monthly dinners with speakers are also on the agenda. “We had a tea party in January, with six women – it was fun to get dressed up for a change. Most farming mums don’t get many chances to do that.”

Coffee groups already established in Geraldine and Ashburton also provide an opportunity to catch up face-to-face, and Chanelle would like to see more set up.

“We’ve got members from the top of the North Island to Southland, even one from the Chathams.

“We’ve already been contacted by women shifting on Gypsy Day – which is great because they will have some support when they arrive.”

Anneke Smit has taken on the job of editor for the

Farming Mums website (http://farmingmumsnz.wordpress.com), which features members, businesses, recipes and a food blog.

Deanne Parkes has also come on board as an administrator for the Facebook page.

“She is more business minded than me, and it’s getting to the stage we need more structure.

“Deanne is hoping to set up a fitness programme without needing to go to a gym – she’s got heaps of experience and has trained elite athletes.

“We are also hoping to get a nutritionist on board to provide quick healthy recipes for freezer meals – which will be great before calving starts for dairy farm mums.”

Chanelle admits the Facebook page is time consuming, but the old adage “if you want something done ask a busy person” holds true – she also chairs the Deer Industry New Zealand Canterbury Advance Party, and is completing a diploma in agribusiness through Lincoln University.

She and David’s ambition is to own their high country property.

We’ve already been contacted by women shifting on Gypsy Day – which is great because they will have some support when they arrive

Chanelle O’Sullivan in the office.

Page 6: Guardian Farming April 2014

Gesapon 20G – ask for it by nameAvailable from

and selected independent retailers.

®GESAPON is a Registered Trade Mark of a Syngenta Group Company. Registered pursuant to the ACVM Act 1997, No. P2130. Registrant: Orion Crop Protection Ltd. Approved pursuant to the HSNO Act 1996, No. HSR000175. See www.foodsafety.govt.nz for registration conditions. See www.epanz.govt.nz for approval conditions.

Gesapon 20G is a granular insecticide for the control of grass grub in pasture and newly sown crops such as cereals.

Only Gesapon 20G provides; • Large pack size – treats up to 4 hectares • Low environmental impact cardboard pack • The Orion Crop Protection Performance Guarantee

GESAPON® 20GTHE TRUSTED BRAND TO PROTECT YOUR

INVESTMENT THIS AUTUMN.

Gesapon 20G is a granular insecticide for the control of grass grub in pasture and newly sown crops such as cereals.

Only Gesapon 20G provides;•

www.orioncp.co.nz

Pete

r Mor

ath

/ hed

geho

ghou

se.co

m

Page 7: Guardian Farming April 2014

COCHRANESyour farm machinery specialist

Maxxum 125 X Silver Maxxum 140 X SilverRated Hp 126 141Max Torque 555Nm 625NmEngine 6.7Ltr Six Cylinder Non Common RailTransmission �16�x�16�Semi�Powershift�40kph�with�Power�Shuttle�Auto�Road�and�Field�ModeHydraulic Pump High�Flow�113Ltr/minCombined Pump Flow 153 Ltr/min (Hydraulic and Steering)Rear Remotes 3�x�DA�Remotes�with�Flow�ControlPTO 540E/540/1000rpmFront Axle Heavy�Duty�with�Limited�Slip�Differential�and�Dynamic�Front�GuardsCab Deluxe Cab with Suspension, High Vis roof Window and Passenger SeatTyres Front�480/65R28,�Rear�600/65R38�Service Intervals 600 HoursWarranty Fully Comprehensive 3 Year 3,000 Hour Warranty CoverLoader Option Manip�Self�Levelling�with�Multi�Coupler,�3rd�Service�and�2mtr�Bucket

• New timber joinery double glazed• Retrofit double glazing to

existing timber joinery

7 Laughton Street, Washdyke, TimaruPhone 03 688 2725www.jmacjoinery.com

MAC OINERYJJL I M I T E D

Talk to our friendly, knowledgeable team to find the best solution for your project!

Jmac Joinery are specialists in:

Reduce energy costs, add value!

Want to get warmer and healthier this winter? Then get double glazingThen get double glazing

West Coast Humates

Phone Roger now: 03 429 1106 or 03 789 7043Phone Roger now: 03 429 1106 or 03 789 7043

• Boost your soil and stock health• Increase production and quality in yields• Get longer life out of your urea and slow

leaching• Boost copper, sulphur, carbon and

magnesium plus add many other trace elements to your soil

LIMITED QUANTITIES AVAILABLE

7www.guardianonline.co.nz

Wetland: swamp by another name

Wetlands are what we used to call swamps. They are

not just wet places with a few rushes around the edge, but are natural sponges that can take the peaks and troughs out of fluctuating water levels and are home to many native plants and animals.

Wetlands are lovely repositories of natural biodiversity. Because water level fluctuates, wetlands offer many different habitats and so often have a very high number of species compared to a similar-sized area of forest or tussock grassland.

Why do our wetlands matter? Around the world, wetlands have greatly diminished in number, size, quality and biodiversity.

Much of the loss of wetlands and swamps has been due to draining for farming and settlement and, more recently, for industry and airports.

In New Zealand, it is

estimated that over 90 per cent of the wetlands that were here in pre-human times are gone.

Most of this loss is due to the expansion of agriculture, and, traditionally, wetlands

were seen as an impediment to productive farmland.

This perception is changing, with many farmers realising that healthy, well-functioning wetlands contribute to the

farm in many ways. Their soft and muddy bottoms can absorb a lot of water that would otherwise flood rivers,

Fun in a red tussock wetland bordering Lake Heron. Photo: Mike Watkins

Continued on next page

Mary Ralston

FOREST AND BIRD

Page 8: Guardian Farming April 2014

Keeping your farm vehicles working

• Prompt and efficient service• Very experienced technicians• Competitive price • 24 hour service (After hours callout applies)

Neumanns Tyres will attend to your tyre requirements anywhere and anytime in Mid CanterburyTRACTORS HARVEST EQUIPMENT IRRIGATORS

197 Wills St, Ashburton Ph 308 6737 www.neumannstyres.co.nz

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz8 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

pasture and infrastructure. They stabilise shorelines and riverbanks.

In dry times they release a steady stream of moisture to downstream paddocks. Their water provides moisture to pollinating insects, native and introduced fish, and native and game birds.

Wetlands help recharge aquifers, and plants such as flax and raupo take up nutrients washed from farmland so that downstream water quality is enhanced. They are a significant carbon sink.

World Wetlands Day is celebrated every year on February 2. This day is the anniversary of the adoption of the Convention on Wetlands on February 2, 1971, in the Iranian city of Ramsar.

The theme for World Wetlands Day this year was “Wetlands and agriculture: partners for growth” which recognises the inter-relationship between farming and wetlands.

New Zealand’s Fish and Game organisation marked World Wetlands Day by reminding farmers that they offer a range of free freshwater advisory services

to enhance existing wetlands or develop new ones.

Fish and Game can assist with stream bank management and water quality, help

improve fish passage through culverts and fords, and help with design and planting of small ponds and wetlands on farms.

Locally, Fish and Game has worked on some significant projects to improve wetlands, such as Deep Stream in the Upper Rangitata where

a collaborative effort was made by Fish and Game, the Department of Conservation, Environment Canterbury and the landowner.

There are some significant wetlands in the Ashburton District but most have gone from the plains. The Hakatere Conservation Park has some great examples of high country wetlands, and these are nationally important for wildlife.

On the coast, there are interesting wetlands at Wakanui that support a range of species. There are many wonderful wetlands along the margins of our braided rivers.

More wet places are needed in between the hills and the sea – let’s celebrate the theme of “Wetlands and agriculture: partners for growth” by enhancing and creating wetlands on the plains.

Everyone will benefit.

From previous page.

Wetland wonderA wetland at the coast near Wakanui with jointed rush or oioi, flax, Plagianthus and Carex species.

Photo: Edith Smith

Page 9: Guardian Farming April 2014

Thinking of converting – check the Land and Water Regional Plan ARTICLES BY

ENVIRONMENT CANTERBURY

If you are thinking of converting your land-use you need to be aware of

what you need to do under the Canterbury Land and Water Regional Plan.

The Plan is the framework for managing land and water in Canterbury for the foreseeable future.

It contains a number of rules for farmers as well as for other activities. For more information visit

www.ecan.govt.nz/lwrp (About the Plan,

Understanding the Plan).Nutrient allocationIf your farm is in an over-

allocated nutrient red zone then you cannot increase the nitrogen loss from your baseline (which is the average annual loss of nitrogen from a property from 1 July 2009 to 30 June 2013). If you are unsure what nutrient allocation zone you are in call Environment Canterbury Customer Services on 0800 324 636.

Water allocationThe Plan identifies areas

where groundwater is fully allocated.

If you cannot secure “new” water then you may be able to find someone willing to transfer their consented water – be aware that any transfers are subject to a portion being surrended.

If you are near an irrigation scheme it may be possible for your property to be included in the command area.

Water efficiencyThe Plan requires the

efficient and improving use of water – you will need a water measuring system that complies with the Irrigation NZ standards.

Hinds Plains The Land and Water

Regional Plan applies in the Hinds Plains catchment – as it does throughout Canterbury (except for the area covered by the Hurunui Waiau River Regional Plan).

The Ashburton Zone Committee has developed a number of recommendations for the Hinds Plains and Environment Canterbury is developing a variation to the Land and Water Regional Plan based on these. The variation is expected to be notified for public consultation later in the year.

To read the committee’s programme of recommendations visit: ww.ecan.govt.nz/publications/Council/hinds-zip-addendum-march-2014.pdf

Sustainable groundwater the subject of community workshop

A community workshop on Wednesday April 16 is looking at the

options around better ways to manage groundwater in the Hinds Plains area.

The workshop will cover a number of ways to improve the sustainable management of groundwater - collectively known as “managed aquifer recharge” or MAR – which are already used in New Zealand, Australia and other countries. Examples include the seepage of surface water (through soakage basins) and the direct injection of water through specially developed bores.

The community workshop will allow people to discuss the opportunities and

potential issues around managed aquifer recharge for the Hinds Plains area. A pilot project for managed aquifer recharge in the Hinds Plains has been recommended by the Ashburton Zone Committee. This will be developed by the zone committee working with Environment Canterbury and Ashburton District Council, along with Arowhenua Rūnanga, and community stakeholders.

Why is managed aquifer recharge

important?Sustainability is a term

used a lot in describing everything from efforts to address a changing climate to managing a household

budget. When it comes to managing groundwater and connected rivers and streams, sustainability is about achieving a balance between what is recharged (gained) and what is discharged (lost) from the underground reservoir (the aquifer).

Aquifers gain water from rainfall and by leakage from rivers and lose water via springs emerging above ground and by human abstraction for drinking water, irrigation or other uses.

Community workshop details

• Wednesday April 16• 7.30pm until 9pm• Hinds Community HallAnyone interested in the

managed aquifer recharge pilot project is welcome to attend.

The workshop will be an opportunity to share ideas, concerns, and develop a better

understanding of the goals behind the use of MAR in the Hinds plains area.

For more information about the workshop please email: [email protected].

Local farming leaders recognised in Ballance AwardsLocal farmers have featured

strongly in this year’s Ballance Farm Environment Awards,

announced at an event in Christchurch recently.

The Ashburton Zone Committee recognises the value of awards - as they highlight that excellence in farming is part of the ongoing work to improve environmental management on-farm.

Awards such as these also show that good and innovative farm management can also be good for business.

The zone committee has also had the privilege of working with a number of local farmers who entered in the Ballance Farm Environment Awards as part of the ongoing work to develop the Hinds Plains Zone Implementation Programme Addendum.

9www.guardianonline.co.nz

Managed aquifer recharge is about sustainable groundwater use.

Mike and Nicky Salvesen.

Kelly and Jeff Gould, and Wyvern Jones.

Advertising feature

Mike & Nicky SalvesenFinalist and winner: Beef + Lamb Livestock Award Wakare LimitedUpper Downs Road, Ashburton

Jeff and Kelly Gould, Wyvern and Beth JonesFinalist and winner: Donaghys Farm Stewardship Award Aberystwyth Dairies LimitedEaling Montalto Road, Ashburton

Mark and Devon SleeFinalist and winner: Supreme Award; PGG Wrightson Land & Life Award; LIC Dairy Farm Award; Waterforce Integrated Management AwardMelrose Dairy Ealing Mark and Devon Slee.

Page 10: Guardian Farming April 2014

Locally owned and operated

T R A N S P O R T L T D

Phone 308 4079

Locally owned and operated

Rural Transport now have a PUBLIC WEIGHBRIDGE for your convenience

at the Northpark Industrial facility

• Casual weighs• Weighs on account• Convenient location• 24 metre weighbridge with 2x12 metre

bridges allows individual truck and trailer weighs at the same time

Call us today to discuss yourweighbridge requirements

Proud to be servicing the farming community in Mid Canterbury

www.ruraltransport.co.nz

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz10 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

25 Robinson Street, Riverside Industrial Estate, Ashburton

Ph: 03 308 8980 Mob: 021 039 5250

Email: [email protected]

Shingle Trailers•12–15tonnetandemaxletrailer

•Removableorfold-downsides•Supersingletyreoptions•Hydraulicbrakingoptions

Feed-out Trough•Lengthsupto9m•Capacity4.5m3•Rearsteering

Fence Tracker •FitstoATVbullbars•Easilyremovable

Showing off the best hills

A doctor hunter in the hills.

GregMartin

BRASS AND FEATHERS

A few years ago, on a Monday morning, I phoned my

doctor’s surgery to make an appointment.

My ear was ringing. It was my left ear, and it was ringing because the day before a friend of mine had fired his .270 at a Rangitata tahr, too close and a little behind me.

My mistake. On the walk out something seemed to rattle against my eardrum with each step I took down the riverbed. It was a bad end to a great two days out back.

That Monday my regular doctor wasn’t available, so I was invited to see a locum from the United States. “What’s the problem?” she asked after I had sat down in the consulting room.

“I was out hunting yesterday and I was too close to my buddy when he fired his rifle. Now my ear is ringing and I can’t hear properly.”

“Hunting!” she said breaking

Page 11: Guardian Farming April 2014

*Galmano is registered for use on wheat. Raxil and Poncho are registered for use on wheat and barley. Raxil, Poncho and Galmano are registered pursuant to the ACVM Act 1997 Nos. P5425, P5967 and P7795 respectively and are approved pursuant to the HSNO Act 1996 Nos. HSR000520, HSR000694 and HSR100402 respectively. Raxil®, Poncho® and Galmano® are registered trademarks of the Bayer Group. ©Bayer CropScience 2014. Bayer SeedGrowth™ is a trademark of the Bayer Group.

The combinations that reach new heights in total crop protection.

BA

C 1

157 are registered pursuant to the ACVM Act

00402 respectively. Raxil®, is a trademark of the Bayer Group.

At Bayer we’ve developed a range of fungicides and insecticides that work in combination to provide protection like a bubble around your cereal seedlings, from sowing through the first weeks of plant growth. Giving you a simple, convenient way to get ultimate peace of mind, better crop emergence and helping to maximise production.

Insist on the perfect combination from Bayer.

Combination for barley: Raxil & Poncho

Broad spectrum control of establishment diseases and systemic protection of key insect pests.

Combination for wheat: Raxil, Poncho & Galmano*

Broad spectrum control of establishment diseases, systemic protection of early rust infection and key insect pests.

For your local SeedGrowth

specialist call

N.I. Jeff Smith 021 426 824

S.I. Colin Dunstan 021 323 147

www.seedgrowth.bayer.co.nz

11www.guardianonline.co.nz

into a grin. “Where were you and what were you trying to shoot?”

It is great giving someone else the hunting or fishing experience that you may have decided to keep for yourself. Probably, because as an observer, you get to see their faces, hear their excitement, take their pictures. (I once wanted to be a film director.) For them it is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. For you it would have been just another deer.

And there is nothing wrong with that. But there is also something addictive about taking a visitor from overseas to your favourite place and watching them hanging onto a bending rod and an

out-of-control fish, even if it all goes wrong. It’s about showing them the best of New Zealand. I often have that someone else in mind when looking at new country. “So-and-so” would love this, I am thinking.

A few weeks after my left ear had stopped ringing, “so-and-so” was the doctor locum from the US and her friend. I took them out to newly tenured-reviewed Conservation estate. “This is nothing like Montana,” one of them had said as we gazed out across the undulating tussock from a high-point. “So open.”

It was hot and I didn’t fancy our chances anymore. But then, way in the distance a speck above a gully glimpsed

through binoculars was translated instantly into deer. We dropped down, and over the next 40 minutes stalked in, staying low. It was hot and slow, the wind not always in our favour.

Eventually we were on our stomachs at the lip of the gully where we had seen the animal standing in the sun on the other side. It was small country when you were up close; matagouri hiding a gurgling stream. We moved up to the left to the head of

the gully, and then sat looking down.

Suddenly, the big old hind came out of nowhere and was running the slope opposite us. Locum doctor from the US had the rifle. Locum doctor grew up hunting with her dad. The hind went down with one shot.

“Unbelievable,” my American friends said as we arrived back on the flat a few hours later.

We clambered over the fence to the road and a Lord of the

Rings tour bus went past. Grubby with blood and deer

legs slung around our necks, the tourists must have thought we were extras shooting another movie. And in a way we were.

“That was the most unbelievable hunt ever.”

You could tell my friends meant it. I was exhausted, but smiling. Yes, another most awesome hunt ever.

Only this time I had made sure that I had put my fingers in my ears.

• Don’t assume a visitor knows about firearm safety (even if they have a licence).

• If they’re holding or using your rifle, they need to stay within arm’s length of you.

• Take them to the range before letting them shoot at an animal.

• Always assume low fitness levels, especially with smokers.

• Check their foot gear the night before you head out. Nikes are no good in the back country.

Tips for guiding overseas visitors

Dawn over deer country. A happy locum (right) with a felled hind.

Page 12: Guardian Farming April 2014

Have you ever found yourself in any of these situations?

•You see the council vehicle pull in the gateway and all you are thinking is “have I done everything I’m supposed too?”

•To consultant…“I’ve had a visit from the council and now I’ve received this letter…”

•The data logger has been downloaded and you have been advised that you have well and truly used your consented allocation and then some, and the rate of take has

regularly been exceeded.Managing resource consent

compliance these days is just about a fulltime job in itself. Resource consents now have more conditions and a higher level of consent holder input, and let’s face it, when you are in the thick of calving, lambing, mating, making supplement feed, or just being farmers, making sure you are compliant with your resource consent conditions is not high on your list of priorities.

CompliancePro, designed to help

you be 100 per cent compliant, all of the

time by: •Use of CS-Vue™ software,

which is an online programme (computer, smart phone, anywhere).

•Administration of Compliance Management Reports received from councils.

• Consulting expertise to assist setting up the correct triggers and alerts within CS-Vue™ required for your consent to ensure full compliance.

•Assistance if non-compliance occurs.

•Advice on consents and what can be done to make compliance easier to manage.

• Field technicians to monitor consent conditions.

• CompliancePro features task calendaring, compliance signoffs, email or text alerts, document archiving and contact management tools.The Pye Group at Temuka

have used CompliancePro and the online software for the past six months to monitor and manage all the Pye Group resource consents and say:

“It’s important to have all your documents in the one place and be easily accessible, and that’s the beauty of CS-Vue.

It provides the tool to make it easier to review and monitor all your consents, and even allows you to link similar consent conditions together to make it more efficient to engage third parties and record resulting information for submission to ECan.

By having the alerts function, it is less likely that you will forget about key requirements of consents until it is too late.

We would certainly recommend it to other businesses.”

CompliancePro maintains a highly accountable and visible record of consent compliance - no more lost documents (even when the manager leaves because they can never be deleted) The core benefits of consent holders using the Compliance Pro

package is: 9 Increased accountability and

transparency with an audit trail.

9 Documents accessible and centralised electronically online.

9 Alerts (email or text) to meet conditions on time and to the right people.

9 Increased environmental performance.

9 Improved relationships with councils.

9 Decreased compliance costs. 9 Decreased legal and financial

risks. 9 Improved operation in

relation to industry best-practice guidelines.

Advertising feature

Call 0800 IRRICON

Avoid the paper war and be compliant with ease! Track, manage and report your resource consent compliance obligations online.

159 Alford Forest Road, Ashburton32 Washdyke Flat Road, Timaruwww.irricon.co.nz0800 IRRICON

Offices:

Accountability and transparency

Documents centralised online and easily accessible

Email or text message alerts to to the right people and on time

Environmental performance improvements

Improved relationship with councils

Compliance cost decreased

MManaged legal & financial risk

Improve your farming operations to meet industry best-practice guidelines

0800 155 669

• Effl uent pond disposal

• Silo cleaning

• Cleaning out underpasses

• Above ground effl uent tank cleaning

• Dairy saucers/sumps/sand traps

• Farm waste management

• Effl uent pond stirring

• Farm effl uent spreading

• High pressure water blasting

• Drain cleaning/unblocking

52 YEARS TAKING CARE OF YOUR BUSINESS

It’s important to have all your documents in the one place. We would certainly recommend it to other businesses.

Introducing CompliancePro

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz12 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nzWater and effluent

Page 13: Guardian Farming April 2014

1. Use a good quality liner

A High-density polyethylene (HDPE) is what I would recommend. This material is made from petroleum and known for its large strength to density ratio. HDPE is the most widely used geomembrane used for lining not only for effluent ponds but also landfills, canals and hazardous waste containment. HDPE has a high chemical resistance along with a high resistance to dairy fats and oils making it well suited for use in your effluent pond.

2. Play by the rulesMake sure you meet all

permitted activity rules in your area 365 days of the year. It is a good idea to aim for good practice rather than just achieving compliance, this makes it easier for you in the long run. I would recommend educating your staff on the rules, operation and

maintenance of the effluent systems and who to call if something does go wrong. The more education and knowledge you and your staff have the easier it is to take care of your effluent systems.

3. Future Proof Just like you, your farm

will change over the next 5-10 years, it may grow or downsize these possibilities need to be taken into account. Choose a size with the help of your contractor and other advisors that will work for you now and allow room for extension should you need it. The location of the pond is another thing to consider, we can never tell what the weather will do so take note of the maximum water table heights that could affect the pond in the event of extreme weather.

4. Do your researchTake the time to research

your contractor, their previous

projects, their health and safety standards as well as their credentials.

A minor breach can have toxic effects and considerable financial costs, for this reason you need to have 100% confidence in your pond lining specialist. Important things your contractor should offer

• Warranty • Double welded seams of

the liner• Comprehensive pressure

testing of those seams throughout the installation

• Technicians’ use of a teniometer for peel shear and tensile testing of HPE welded products. Regular testing ensures the reliability and structural integrity of the product and seams.

• HDPE roll number recording to ensure the traceability of the product.

• Onsite fabrication for design flexibility.

Last of all on completion of your project you should receive a detailed quality assurance report. The main

thing is to ask questions don’t be afraid to get involved and make sure you are making your effluent pond the very best it can be.

Advertising feature

Ask about our independent Farm Environmental Health check too!

Phone: 0064 21 222 3015 Email: [email protected] Web: www.eacs.co.nz

Need a new effl uent system? Contact us now!Need a new effl uent system? Contact us now!

• Systems tailored to your farm• We can work around your milking • 30T excavator to do all the heavy stuff• Reliable components and new technologies • Hands on customer service from design to

installation• Servicing the South Island

Hey mate, it really stinks

around here!

111 Winslow Willowby RdWillowby, New Zealand

Guaranteed installation and materials |

Proven expertise | Superior geomembrane

product | Land application solutions |

Customised solution to suit your budget

www.isdamlining.co.nz

COMPLY WITH Farm Dairy Effluent

regulationS

ACT NOW!

Call us now:

0800 433 367

Talk to I.S. Dam Lining today – we will

design and install a safe and compliant

effluent management solution to suit

your requirements.

STOP

STORE

SPREAD

SAFE

Stop your effluent leaching into waterways

with a 100% leak-free pond liner.

Store your effluent over winter – no need

to apply to sodden paddocks.

Apply to dry paddocks at a rate that

won’t pollute the waterways.

Comply with council regulations and

resource consent conditions.

FDE DESIGN ACCREDITEDI.S. Dam Lining is New Zealand’s only FDE Accredited liner company!

Effluent pond.

Four tips to get the most out of your effluent pond

13www.guardianonline.co.nz

EMAIL [email protected] WEB www.envirolinenz.co.nz

QUALITY DAIRY EFFLUENT LINERS & INSTALLATION

Water and effluent

Page 14: Guardian Farming April 2014

In 1975 I purchased an effluent spreading run that was originally started by

Habgoods Cartage of Lincoln then sold to Collin Hamilton who ran it for a few years.

It was then only three or four days per week carting and spreading mainly manure from under-laying cages, pig manure and a few dairy sumps. In those days I had a single axle Bedford with a 10,000 litre single artie unit under it. She would think about getting stuck while driving past a wet paddock while still on the road.

Things have come a long way since then with our latest truck having fat singles on the

front and air pressure controls on the rear tyres for better traction and less compaction and damage to the paddocks.

Over the years I have noticed a huge change in the dairy farms.

Most of the early farms we went to were only a hole in the ground and when fill, ran into the nearest creek or a ditch that had a couple of weirs in it to hold back the worst of the solids.

Today things are much tidier and on the whole I believe most dairy farmers are genuinely trying to deal with their dairy effluent in a proper and more cost efficient way. Robsons have emptied quite

a few larger effluent ponds, moving up to 2560 cubic metres sucked and spread using four trucks over two days.

On a larger pond we have two stirrers operating and an extra man moving these around the pond to keep it completely stirred up for an ideal spreading consistency.

Leaving ponds too long only makes the effluent too thick and much slower to suck and spread, costing more for the same job.

We have noticed over the years that the farms that empty their saucers at least once or twice through the milking season do not have

the same pump problems as saucers that clog up with sand and rocks that seem to go through all systems causing blockages and break downs.

We advise regular maintenance on saucers and wedges and some customers have learnt that this is better than digging it out with a tractor or digger and ending up with a product that still needs spreading.

In my opinion, weeping walls are a good system but it is advisable not to leave them too long as once again they become a lot harder to empty and in the long run cost more.

Keeping your effluent systems running clean is like

changing the oil in your car- if you do not do it you pay the price for repair bills and breakdowns.

On most effluent pond jobs we go and have a look at the site beforehand so as to advise farm management what is needed, when we will have a stirrer on site and what day we can do the job.

Robsons is a family owned and operated business with myself and two sons Keiran and Justin running a fleet of 12 vehicles covering all aspects of liquid waste including septic tanks and grease traps.

Advertising feature

In the waste business for 40 years

Robson Environmental

Services Ltd

Phone (03) 349 8871

[email protected]

www.robsonenvironmental.co.nz

Been in it for the last 40 plus years

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz14 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nzWater and effluent

Page 15: Guardian Farming April 2014

Amongst soil’s powerful properties is the ability to filter effluent and

extract the nutrients for the benefit of the pasture, micro-organisms and soil animals. The ability to apply effluent across the land surface to promote pasture growth requires the right infrastructure.

Injecting effluent through spray irrigation systems allows for low rates to be applied with minimal manual input, making it a preferred method compared to other alternatives. Installing variable rate irrigation (VRI) technology onto your centre-pivot or lateral-move irrigator can transform that effluent dispersal system from sufficient to smart. The difference VRI technology creates is the ability to vary application depths along

the length of the irrigator to match the soil’s ability to retain the nutrients from the effluent.

Simon Johnson (Rangitata Island, Canterbury) has had great success using his Precision VRI system to distribute the farms effluent.

“The VRI has given me options for effluent discharge I never had before. It has allowed us to pin point application, distribute lightly and widely via the pivot, cover areas that have drains and water at different times of the year and generally take all the risk out of our system. Our old system was fraught with issues and risk.”

“I was first a little nervous around effluent through the VRI as it had not really been tested, but it seems as long as you follow the rules by flushing the system afterward

and pond management, it works fantastically. I also believe your pond design is critical to achieve good green water at the quality you need. We run 100 per cent effluent through the pivot and have no problems so far.”

Effective effluent application requires a knowledge of the volume and nutrient content of the effluent being distributed, the area necessary to handle the

effluent effectively and of soil properties and groundwater conditions. A key principle is the application of effluent only to soils with sufficient water holding capacity, at suitable application rates to allow infiltration.

As the Precision VRI system controls every individual sprinkler along the length of the irrigator; tracks, drains and troughs can be totally avoided. Buffered avoidance zones, as required by many consents, can be placed around environmentally sensitive areas and waterways.

The solid particles within the effluent will need to be screened/filtered to prevent nozzle blockages on the irrigator. New, custom-designed filtered valves are an option with Precision VRI systems to combat valves blockages. The Precision

VRI system comes with the advantage of online monitoring and reporting. The new online tool, which is available for the coming irrigation season, allows farmers to view how much effluent has been applied through the irrigator, when and where. Reports can be easily produced by farmers to provide third parties proof of placement.

Smart effluent management with Precision VRI can therefore lighten a farm’s environmental footprint and improve the bottom line at the same time. The Precision VRI system is available through Zimmatic dealers.

It is recommended that they be consulted to discuss the suitability of the new filtered valves for your filtered effluent supply.

Advertising feature

Irrigatingthe farmtrack isn’tgoing toget youanywhere.

www.precisionirrigation.co.nz | 0800 438 627

Some irrigation systems spray water everywhere. On your farm tracks, drains and gateways. Not to mention over-watering heavy soils that just don’t need it. But with Precision VRI (Variable Rate Irrigation) you only irrigate as much as is needed, where it’s needed. Saving water, saving power, saving track maintenance costs.

By using Precision VRI, the latest soil and GPS mapping technology and choosing where and at what rate you irrigate, you could save thousands. It has been shown that the system can pay for itself within one irrigation season.

Find out how to irrigate only where it is needed by talking to your Zimmatic™ by Lindsay dealer today or by visiting our website.

BowdenEnvironmentalResource Management Consultants

• ResourceConsents• Groundwater• SurfaceWater• Effluent• ConsentsCompliance

• AquiferTesting• FlowMonitoring• Ecology• Advocacy

92 Williams Street, Kaiapoiwww.bowden.co.nzPh: 03 375 5015

Simon Johnson stands in front of his Zimmatic centre-pivot with the Precision VRI add-on which he uses to distribute effluent.

The VRI has given me options for effluent discharge I never had before

Effluent application made easy

15www.guardianonline.co.nz Water and effluent

Page 16: Guardian Farming April 2014

SlipMeter™Control and measure �ows at turnouts, without going to site.

FlumeMeter™Measure and automatically upload �ow data for consent compliance and easy reporting to regional councils.

Automatically maintain a desired �ow rate or constant water level.

FlumeGate™

Better solutions from the irrigation experts.

Because Rubicon Water is 100% focused on irrigation, we can concentrate on providing great solutions to the problems that are unique to our industry. We’ll work with you to understand your needs and design the right solution using our intelligent control and metering hardware, data communications devices and sophisticated management software – all of which work together seamlessly. And with 15,000 automated gates and �ow meters installed around the world, you can be con�dent that Rubicon has the know-how to deliver a solution that works for you.

Boraman Consultants 44 Theodosia Street Timaru ph 03 688 5539 www.boraman.co.nz

FlumeMeter™ - Regional Council consent compliance solution

www.rubiconwater.com

Boraman Consultants is a proud supplier and installer of Rubicon products.

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz16 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

Tony Davoren

HYDRO SERVICES

To irrigate or not – autumn is the season of the reluctant irrigator

The time is right to be a reluctant irrigator. All but into the second

month of autumn, past the equinox, less than 12 hours daylight and declining solar radiation.

Put it in the mixer with periodic rainfall and it is time to think about irrigating, or not, and saving on your nutrient leaching.

At this time of the irrigating season, the adjective reluctant should apply to you as an irrigator – even more so this year with pretty regular rainfall during March.

It should mean that you experience some inner struggle and are unwilling or unable to decide whether to irrigate or not. Reluctant is derived from the Latin

reluctantem* meaning “to struggle against”, although nowadays reluctant conjures

up a sense of “unwilling”. If you’re reluctant to

irrigate, you might likely feel

you might “struggle” against your neighbours who are irrigating or keen to irrigate.

Don’t worry; offer up a reluctant smile instead even a grimace!

Tony Davoren says it’s time to think about turning off the irrigation system.

Water and effluent

Page 17: Guardian Farming April 2014

Last month I discussed how day length and solar radiation declines at this time of the year and we lose the “energy” to drive water use and growth.

A month on since the last article (now in the schematic below) – day length is well below 12 hours and solar radiation is about to decline quite quickly.

It is now pretty difficult, despite some Indian summer temperatures and blue sky days, to both grow lots of leaf area and therefore have high water use (evapotranspiration).

Graph oneNot only is there not enough

energy to drive growth and water use, plants can now “grab” water off the soil particles when it is more tightly bound.

It is easier to get water from the soil when 2mm/day or less is needed when 5mm/day is needed. As the diagram shows, we are now well into the “low” (and continuing lower)” demand stress band.

Graph twoThe “stress band” will continue to

decline as we move through April – the inner struggle against irrigating should become more intense, perhaps “ulcerous”, particularly if we continue to get 10-20mm every week to 10 days.

Rainfall of these amounts is more than enough to meet demand for whatever you ware growing:

What irrigation is likely to assist

most at this stage is:• Increased drainage;• Where drainage = nutrient

leaching;• Where nutrient leaching =

difficulty complying with Land

and Water Regional Plan (LWRP) nutrient limits that are soon to arrive on your farming system.

*Reluctantem – be unwilling, accept the inner struggle and leave the red light on.

SOMETHING SEPTIC?Well, if it’s not your wife we can help.

Phone Darryl Burrowes on 03 308 5293 or 0274 333 563

We provide a fast and e�cient service to Mid Canterbury

• Septic tank cleaning all systems• Portaloos• Dairy saucers and sumps• Grease traps• Swimming pools• Drain cleaning truck• 24 hours a day 7 days a week - on call

Locally owned and operated

• Concrete Water/Feed Troughs • Septic Tanks • Silage Pits

• Water Tanks/Effl uent Tanks • Concrete Bunkers • Pump/Agri-Chemical/Killing Sheds

For any quotes or enquiries contact us on 03 308 4816 or call into the yard at 205 Wilkins Rd, Tinwald, Ashburton.

email: [email protected]

17www.guardianonline.co.nz

To irrigate or not – autumn is the season of the reluctant irrigator

Graph one Graph two.

It is now pretty difficult, despite some Indian summer temperatures and blue sky days, to both grow lots of leaf area and therefore have high water use (evapo-transpiration).

Water and effluent

Page 18: Guardian Farming April 2014

16

HM

DG

20

20

16HMDG2020 Ashburton Guardian

irrigation wellspotable water supplieswater quality testingground source heatinggeotechnical assessment

www.drilling.co.nz Ph 03 324 2571 120 High St, Southbridge

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz18 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

www.jj.co.nz

36 Hickory Place, Hornby CHCH P 03 344 5645Sales Maurice Jordan 0272 607 821 Nick Wilson 0274 987 044Service Dave Paris 0272 607 822Parts Grant Legge 0277 056 837

9a McGregor Lane, Ashburton P 03 307 6031Sales Terry Gordon 0272 60 7820 Bede Prendergast 0277 066 682 Service Christoph Kalin 0272 607 833Parts Dave Shaw 0272 607 001

Our feed out equipment helps you cram more into every day. The stable includes forage wagons, bale feeders and mixer wagons. The right tool saves you time, so you can make every minute count.

YOU GAINPRODUCTIVITYONE MINUTEAT A TIME

News from the Ashburton district is not something to be proud of

John Leadley

RURAL COMMENT

Two items of news in the past week have tended to downplay

some of the many positive aspects of life we enjoy in this great Ashburton district.

First, the data released last week from the March 2013 Census highlights Ashburton district as having the largest drop in percentage of home ownership to population across the whole country, from 72 per cent in the 2006 Census to 67 per cent last year.

While this is still above the national average of 64.8 per cent, it indicates a worrying trend, particularly as the district has consistently had one of the lowest if not the lowest level of unemployment in New Zealand, over the seven-year period. The reasons for this may be

many and varied but the fact remains that home ownership is declining. Debt-free home ownership at retirement should surely be the aim of every couple.

Waimakiriri district tops New Zealand’s home ownership rankings with more than 80 per cent of its residents owning their own homes and the figure is still rising. Why is this the case?

Both Waimakariri and Ashburton district have rural-based economies, both have similar percentages of residents over 65 years of age (above the national average) and both have benefitted from the Christchurch relocation. Property values are similar.

Census data shows that the median income per male worker in this district is $43,900, that is. $7400 higher than the national medium. Interestingly female wages are on par with the national median. This still needs addressing at a government level.

The key point of all this is that despite perceptions, low wages should not necessarily

be a reason for low home-ownership levels. The main reason is financial indiscipline and savings prioritisation.

In a similar vein, lack of building sites is not an issue, with several hundred consented and available from $90,000 upwards.

One area that I believe could and should be addressed is the rather high level of one-person households in the district, that is, 2913 of our 12,001 census night households, about 25 per cent.

I’m certainly not advocating forcing any person from their own home, but am fully aware that this situation was highlighted at the Inaugural Social Wellbeing Forum set up by ex mayor Bede O’Malley following the huge 2006 snow event.

These forums were organised mainly because trauma from the snow clearly indicated that Ashburton appeared to fall into a crack of social service delivery between government welfare services based equally between Timaru and Christchurch. We were in “no-man’s land”.

Health services are Christchurch based, police and family welfare issues Timaru etc – and the likes of Housing, Inland Revenue and others without local representation.

At that forum Housing New Zealand advised that it would be rationalising State housing in Ashburton, noting several sole-occupier situations and many instances of quarter-

Ashburton police senior sergeant Grant Russell on his final day at the Ashburton Police Station last month.

Page 19: Guardian Farming April 2014

19www.guardianonline.co.nz

· Premium quality

products

· Efficient irrigation

· Full back up service

· Design by an

experienced team

Contact Rainer Irrigation

today to discuss your

irrigation requirements

and maximise your

irrigation efficiency.

10 Robinson Street, Ashburton P: 03 307 9049 F: 03 307 9047 E: [email protected] Visit www.rainer.co.nz

Rainer Irrigation – Providing irrigators for every application

COMING TO AN AGENT NEAR YOU

Brighter, Smoother, Stronger, More Powerful - www.accessatv.co.nz

News from the Ashburton district is not something to be proud of

acre sections – often contiguous, where further housing units could be constructed for low cost. Unfortunately actions didn’t follow words – something I

believe that could and should be addressed at a council-advocacy level.

The other media-highlighted issue was the matter of alcohol policy and

youth behaviour. This is best instanced by the alleged “king hit” on young father Alan Hill on March 9. In Australia “king hit” has been replaced by “coward attack” by the judiciary. A great idea.

Amendments to the National Alcohol Policy provided an opportunity for more local input to closing hours. Great proactive work by licence holders in collaboratively establishing a “one-way-door” policy was a positive initiative some years ago.

As one who has volunteered with Town Watch for many years, I’m well aware of the deterioration of street behaviour after the hours of 1am on weekend mornings.

Ashburton has just the same issues as our major cities only on a smaller population base. It’s only a matter of time before someone is maimed or killed, if the booze culture is not reined in.

The Alcohol Reform Bill was introduced with great fanfare by government as the opportunity to make meaningful changes to liquor policy. The longer it has spent

in its communication and collaboration stages, the more watered down have its reforms become.

Despite pressure from police, Safer Ashburton, Acads and other health-wise authorities, it seems that pressure from the liquor outlets, and the financial might of a major grocery consortium may well skittle most of the meaningful clauses of the reform.

Unsurprisingly, it is not these people that are on hand to address the trauma, both mental and physical, that results from alcohol-fuelled mayhem.

These idiots can have relatives and friends who are genuinely ill awaiting attention from already overstressed doctors and nurses.

Wellington hospital reports 80 per cent of its admissions on Friday and Saturday nights are a direct result of drug or alcohol over indulgence. This figure is common across the country.

A shameful and financially crippling state of affairs

from a so called developed nation. The time to act as a community is now. The people to lead this locally are surely our district council and staff.

While I accept that social issues may well be outside the comfort zone of our mayor and some councillors and staff, the fact remains that through the mandate of the Local Government Act, council does have a responsibility for economic, environmental, cultural and social issues. The so called “quadruple bottom line”. Remember?

Council should not be blamed for the decline in behavioural standards of our young people, or the decline in housing ownership. They must however be part of the solution.

How true the words of retiring senior sergeant Grant Russell. “We don’t really have a significant youth problem in Ashburton. What we do have is a serious parenting problem.” How very true.

Please Mr Mayor and councillors; can an annual Social Wellbeing Forum be reinstated?

Page 20: Guardian Farming April 2014

Agrecovery Rural Recycling is returning to rural Canterbury to

hold five free container recycling events following the success of collections in previous years.

Three events in Darfield and Fairlie in 2012 netted 2000kg of plastic, equivalent to about 4000 containers that might otherwise have been burned or buried on local farms.

This year, events will be held in Darfield, Fairlie, Cheviot, Geraldine and Oxford.

“We have 12 permanent collections sites across Canterbury which provide year round access to recycling for farmers and growers, however with the ban on burning and dumping we want to widen that network as much as possible,” says Duncan Scotland, of Agrecovery.

Several retailers and contractors are supporting the events including Farmlands, PGG Wrightson and Whitestone Contracting.

Farmers and contractors can bring their empty, triple rinsed agrichemical and animal health plastic containers to the following events: Darfield – April 14 at Farmlands, 40 South Terrace, 8am–12pm or PGG Wrightson, 1 Ross Street 12:30pm–4:30pm; Geraldine – 7 May at PGG Wrightson, 4 Talbot Street, 10am-2pm (with BBQ); Fairlie – May 9 at Whitestone Contracting, Allandale Road, 10am-2pm; Cheviot – May 15 at PGG Wrightson Open Day, Main Road, 11am-3pm (with BBQ); and Oxford (details still to be confirmed, please refer to www.agrecovery.co.nz).

“Our 56 participating manufacturers pay a levy to allow containers to be recycled for free. We really hope farmers will throw their triple rinsed empties into the ute and avoid illegally burning or dumping plastic,” says Mr Scotland.

The collected plastic will be recycled at Astron Plastics in

Christchurch, with one of the common uses for the recycled plastic being an underground cable cover.

“Last financial year, we collected enough containers nationwide to make a 15cm wide cable cover reaching from Auckland to Invercargill and back,” says Mr Scotland.

To recycle through this event, containers must be upto-60 litres in size, free of chemical residue and organic contamination inside and out, and still have the label on to identify the brand. All containers will be inspected before being accepted. Only containers from participating brand owners are free to recycle. A list of these and full acceptance criteria are available by calling 0800 247 326 or visiting www.agrecovery.co.nz.

Permanent Agrecovery container collection sites around Canterbury are located in Amberley, Ashburton, Culverden, Duntroon, Leeston, Mayfield, Methven, Rakaia, Rangiora, Rolleston, Temuka and Waimate. Full details are available at www.agrecovery.co.nz.

Advertising feature

Agrecovery is holding collection events for theFREE recycling of empty plastic containers

DARFIELD - 14 APRILFarmlands, 40 South Terrace, 8am–12pm

PGG Wrightson, 1 Ross Street, 12:30pm–4:30pm

GERALDINE - 7 MAYPGG Wrightson, 4 Talbot Street, 10am–2pm (with BBQ!)

FAIRLIE - 9 MAYWhitestone Contracting, Allandale Road, 10am–2pm

Your containers must be:

Plastic, 0-60 litres in size, with lid removed

Free from chemical and organic residue inside and out *

From participating brand owners – leave product label on for identification (see www.agrecovery.co.nz or free phone 0800 247 326 for brand owner list)*

* Triple rinsing is recommended. +Only containers from participating brand owners are free to recycle. All containers will be inspected before being accepted.

Your land, our environment Protect it!

Rinse Return Recycle!

www.agrecovery.co.nz | 0800 AGRECOVERY (0800 247 326)Terms and conditions apply | Events subject to cancellation

Quality Compost

Mastagard Ashburton

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION OR TO PLACE AN ORDER CONTACT US TODAY!

COMPETITIVELY PRICED & TESTED ~ ready for application to farmland• Improve soils & water retention• Reduce fertilizer inputs• Reduce nutrient leaching

This fully matured compost has been developed over two years, enhanced with Effective Microrganisms and is now ready to be bulk loaded from the Ashburton Resource Recovery Park.

OFFICE 21 Francella St, Christchurch 8011POSTAL PO Box 4126 ChCh, Mail Centre 8140

PHONE 0800 88 66 55 EMAIL [email protected] www.mastagard.co.nz

We have 12 permanent collections sites across Canterbury

Free recycling encourages repeat visits

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz20 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

Agrecovery Container Recycling – collected plastic is processed in New Zealand into underground electrical cable covers.

Agrecovery Container Recycling – Agrecovery mobile processing truck shreds containers brought in for recycling at previous collection event.

Green farming

Page 21: Guardian Farming April 2014

Gary McCormick Transport LtdPO Box 5044, Tinwald, Ashburton 7741 | Phone: 3072100 | Fax: 3072101

We offer a regular Rubbish Removal Service, with many local Companies hiring our Front Loader Bins and using our Cardboard Recycling Cages,We also have Open Top Bins on a casual basis, for property clean ups,

building works and Garden tidy ups.And a Household and/or Garden waste Drum empty service.

All provided by a Company based in Tinwald.

• For Casual & Permanent Bin Hires• Cardboard Recycling

• Drum Hires

21www.guardianonline.co.nz

Sheryl Stivens

MASTAGARD ASHBURTON

The circular economy

Rethink how you spend your money so you buy durable long-lasting items. Many Recycling Centres are in fact “product graveyards” where many badly designed, poorly made or obsolete household items – such as vacuum cleaners, televisions and computers end up. Incredibly 90 per cent of the products we buy become waste within six months.

The United Kingdom is investing $2.3 million (£1.2 million) into new design and business partnerships that rethink products, components and systems so as to close the resource loop and move from a linear take, make, buy and

dispose model to a circular economy. In order to make this shift designers, members of the public, materials experts, manufacturers etc are being encouraged to work together to enable The Great Recovery. This will lead to products with far lower environmental impact and less dependency on finite and polluting materials.

www.greatrecovery.org.uk

Cleaning up plastic in our oceans

A 19-year-old student, Boyan Slat has designed an award-winning mechanism that he believes can clean up millions of tonnes of plastic waste from the planet’s five giant ocean gyres. The network of floating booms and processing platforms won the best design award at the Delft University of Technology and $92,500 ($US80,000) has been raised for the first feasibility study. The ingenious design uses the ocean’s currents to funnel in the plastic pieces and filters separate plankton from plastic.

In his inspiring speech he

explains how it will eventually be self-sustaining as the plastic collected can be sold for recycling. Mr Slat was inspired as a young boy diving in Greece where he saw more plastic bags floating in the ocean than fish.

www.boyenslat.com

Do you have farm plastics to recycle? Farm plastics including

silage wrap, silage covers and baling twine can all be recycled via a collection system

Contact www.plasback.co.nz Triple rinsed plastic

agricultural chemical containers are also recyclable Contact www.agrecovery.co.nz

Clean plastic bottles and containers – as well as clean plastic bags and film – can be dropped off for recycling at the Ashburton or Rakaia Resource Recovery Parks. Plastic litter can so easily become ocean pollution.

Do you recycle your ink cartridges?

Save your empty cartridges

and drop them off at the Ashburton Resource Recovery Park for safe recycling.

They are refilled and reused and eventually the plastic is recycled into durable park benches and other useful items.

Solar spinach-renewable energy

from plantsHave you ever noticed

that when weeding a bed of spinach how much light emanates from the leaves when the sun is shining on them? I was intrigued to read recently that the protein in spinach has been found to convert light into energy so readily that it is being combined with silicon to make hyper-efficient solar cells.

This protein (PS1) can continue to photosynthesise even when extracted from the parent plant and converts almost 100 per cent of sunlight into energy – more than double the efficiency of today’s best photovoltaic panels. This bio-hybrid solar cell is non-toxic and renewable

and could potentially transform the photovoltaic market.

The science of bio mimicry continues to surprise us by unveiling nature’s wisdom.

Build up your soils this autumn

Autumn is a good time to apply compost onto farmland and gardens. If it is compost you have made you can spread it out on bare soils before it is entirely broken down.

Cover with a layer of mulch, old carpet, wet newspaper and straw or stack bottom from your silage pit. Use whatever you have to protect your soils over winter and build up organic matter.

Mastagard have freshly screened and tested compost competitively priced and ready for application to farmland.

Give it a go to improve your water retention, reduce your nutrient leaching and fertiliser inputs in 2014.• If you want help with

composting or recycling call 0800 627824 or email [email protected]

Advertising feature

Recycling at home and overseasGreen farming

Page 22: Guardian Farming April 2014

Environmental management plans

Modern engineering standards mean that waste facilities are constructed to have as little impact on the environment as possible.

Water qualityIt is important to undertake

extensive monitoring of the water quality both on and around sites. Several types of testing should be performed regularly, including those outlined below.

LeachateLeachate-collection systems

trap landfill leachate which forms when liquid seeps through refuse. A network of drains collects the leachate from within the landfill for disposal at a wastewater treatment plant. Leachate is monitored at bores in the landfill to check quantity and quality.

StormwaterStormwater is managed

at waste facilities (landfills, managed fills, recovery facilities) to ensure only clean rainwater leaves the site. Larger sites

may have stormwater ponds or wetlands. Smaller sites often have grassed swales and rain gardens. These structures retain stormwater and allow it to be released slowly into a reticulated network or natural water. By slowing the flow of water, sediment settles out of the water column. The wetlands act as a biological filter and provide habitat for native wildlife.

Sediment controlSediment control measures

such as silt fences are used at landfill and managed fill sites. Silt fences are put up around areas of earthworks and in stormwater drains. Silt fences trap sediment (soil) but allow stormwater to pass, which reduces the sediment load in stormwater runoff. Sediment is also removed from surface runoff when it settles out of the water in a sediment pond - typically aided by a chemical flocculent.

Ground waterGroundwater quality is

monitored at landfills and managed fills using monitoring bores or wells. Groundwater is collected from the wells

and analysed for chemical parameters required by resource consents.Air quality landfill gas

Landfill gas is created by decomposing refuse. The gas is primarily methane and carbon dioxide.

A network of pipes collects and controls landfill gas. Following collection the landfill gas is either used for generating electricity or burnt in a flare. Regular monitoring ensures gas is not escaping through the landfill surface or migrating through the ground.

DustDust is managed through

strict waste acceptance criteria and use of dust suppressants.

OdourOdour is minimised through

waste acceptance criteria. Odour monitoring is undertaken at recovery facilities, composting plants and landfills to ensure there is no odour nuisance beyond the boundary.

If necessary, reodorant can be sprayed to minimise any odour that arises.

Advertising feature

Enviromental effects and management

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz22 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

Unit 3, 211 Ferry Rd,Waltham, ChristchurchPh 03 928 2320 • Email: [email protected]

This Month’s Special

Call now and receive 20% OFF

Bitumen Stock Pile Clearance

7000 sq m to clear. Including free

preparation in all areas.

Terms and conditions apply.

Call us today on 0800 240 120 | www.envirowaste.co.nzEmail: [email protected]

Working with you for a greener tomorrow

Specialists in all types

of waste removal

Frontload bins

for General Waste

Gantry Skips

for Building sites

or a home clean up

Green farming

Page 23: Guardian Farming April 2014

After the winds that we all experienced last year, many of us are

still to deal with the damage left. Wind gusts uprooted trees, ripped roofs off houses, smashed windows and even trampolines flung into power lines its a job we - have been putting off for months. Now its time to dust off the chainsaw and tackle those trees.

You dread it. We dread it. The trees dread it. Everyone hates it, but the laws of physics demand it. Yes, it is time to talk about tree trimming!

Dead or damaged limbs on a tree should be removed to help promote healthy growth. A chainsaw can take much of the work out of tree trimming. Although great care must be used when operating a chainsaw. When operated properly, a chainsaw can be a useful part of the home landscape tool arsenal.

1. Locate low-growing limbs that are dying or have been damaged. Trim only limbs that are no more than shoulder

height with a chainsaw.2. Put on safety glasses,

earmuffs and gloves. Wear a long-sleeved shirt, long pants and closed-toed shoes for protection. Consider wearing chainsaw chaps as added protection for your legs.

3. Clear any debris, such as rocks or limbs, from around the base of the tree so there is good footing. Fuel and start the chainsaw following the manufacturer’s directions. Stand with your feet shoulder width apart for good balance.

4. Cut limbs using an undercut method. Beginning at least eight inches from the tree trunk, make a cut one-third of the way through the limb from the bottom. Remove the saw and make a cut on the top of the limb in the corresponding location. Cut completely through the limb this time and allow it to fall.

5. Make the final cut on the limb within two inches or so of the trunk. Place the saw bar on top of the limb and cut down and completely through the limb. Stop the saw and remove

the limbs from the area before continuing with additional trimming.

Things you will need• Safety glasses• Gloves• Earmuffs• Long-sleeved shirt

• Pants• Closed-toed shoes• ChapsContact your Local STIHL

Shop Ashburton for further details and information on their chainsaw and lamb meat pack competition.

Advertising feature

STIHL Shop Ashburton, 418 West Street Ashburton

BUY SELECTED STIHL OR MASPORT PRODUCTS AND GO IN THE DRAW TO WIN AN ECOSHEDS SHED AND TOOLS TO THE VALUE OF $5000

SAVE AND WINA SHED LOAD OF TOOLS

Terms and conditions apply, ask in store for details. Offers valid until 30 April 2014 or while stocks last.

STIHL MS 170 CHAINSAWNOW $345SAVE $50

STIHL MS 231 CHAINSAWNOW $795SAVE $100

Come and meet your new

team at STIHL shop Ashburton

PURCHASE ANY CHAINSAW THIS MONTH AND RECEIVE A LAMB MEAT PACK SUPPLIED BY ALLENTON MEAT CENTRE

Clean up, cut up and chainsaw!

23www.guardianonline.co.nz

From left to right - Rob Flanagan – can-am technician, Nathan Langridge- can am Manager, Rachel Trotter – Office/Administrator, Lester Hurst – STIHL shop Technician, Sam Kitson – Office/Sales, Sam Bromfield – STIHL shop Manager.

Page 24: Guardian Farming April 2014

SAFER

SAFERRURALROADS

SAFERRURALROADS

RURAL

ROADS COWS CROSSING

Do your cows cross the road?You need to use crossing mats, warning signs and lights.

You need to think about the safest place and time to cross.

Lastly, clean up after your cows - it can get slippery!

SAFER RURAL ROADS It’s your responsibility.

w w w.ashbur tondc.gov t.nzSupreme Award Winner

We are the experts in:

Underpasses Laneways EffluentPonds

Phone Dave Rowlands 027 484 1114

Ashburton Contracting LimitedP 03 308 4039 A 48 South Street, Ashburton W www.ashcon.co.nz

Gold Sponsor

Diesel Workshop direct line: 308 7400

ASHBURTON832 East St03 307 9911

Danny King - 027 535 3538

CHRISTCHURCH 799 Jones Rd, Rolleston

03 349 4883Steve Johnson - 027 486 7726

www.dne.co.nz 0800 432 633

THE FIRST ATV DESIGNED FROM THE GROUND UP SPECIFICALLY FOR NEW ZEALAND

• Built for Australia with Heavy Duty “HD” Features: - Sealed Driveshaft Splines - Sealed Ball Joints - Sealed Suspension Bushings

• Mirrors, Indicators and Horn • Dump Box with 180kg Capacity• Engine Braking System & 4 Wheel Descent Control (4WDC)

www.polaris.co.nz

DRUMMOND AND ETHERIDGE 832 EAST STREET, ASHBURTON. PH: 03 307 9911

ALL THESE GREAT FEATURES

FOR JUST $10,865 (EXCL GST)

THE FIRST ATV DESIGNED FROM THE GROUND UP SPECIFICALLY FOR NEW ZEALAND

• Built for Australia with Heavy Duty “HD” Features: - Sealed Driveshaft Splines - Sealed Ball Joints - Sealed Suspension Bushings

• Mirrors, Indicators and Horn • Dump Box with 180kg Capacity• Engine Braking System & 4 Wheel Descent Control (4WDC)

www.polaris.co.nz

DRUMMOND AND ETHERIDGE 832 EAST STREET, ASHBURTON. PH: 03 307 9911

INCLUDING: Power Steering, Hazard Lights, 550kg Towing Weight

PUT IT IN YOUR DIARY!Polaris Demo Days

9 & 10 May, 2014 - 9am-3pmFrasers Rd, Tinwald, ASHBURTON

(Tarbottons shingle pit)

IMAGES FROM 2013 POLARIS DEMO DAY

Page 25: Guardian Farming April 2014

25www.guardianonline.co.nz

ATTENTION FARMERS!SILAGE SEASON IS UPON US

From mower conditioning/rotor raking/baling to wrapped in a tube - We can do it all.

* 4x3 Square Baler (with scales & moisture meter)* 3x3 Square Baler* Round Baler* Tube & individual wrapping+ also fine chop silage in a stack

We buy/sell standing grass, silage & straw etcCall us for all your silage/baleage needs.

PH:3036300 MOB:0272798704

Arable Farmers - Don’t forget to book in early for all your windrowing requirements. We operate the latest MacDon M series windrowers with 9 different front options.

Tony Boyce Builders LtdP: 03 688 2181E: [email protected]

• Dairy sheds, feed shed & pads, farms sheds

• All concrete work including effl uent ponds

• New residential, agricultural, commercial & industrial buildings

• Alterations and any other building work

• In-house joinery services

• Insurance work• In-house design• Turnkey solutions

SMITHSWELLDRILLING LIM

ITED EST.1961EST.1961EST.1961

Member NZDF

Domestic, Dairy Stockwaterand irrigation wells

Supply & installation of pumpsystems

For a non obligation on siteconsultation, contact:

Barry KewishPh 03 324 3799or 027 433 8245

Email: [email protected]

Irrigation Pump Sheds/Storage

These sheds are made to be easy to install with the middle piece of roof iron having been left off for easy Hiab onto your concrete pad. A 50mm overhang has been allowed to fit over

your concrete pad so that you have no leaks.

There is hex bird netting over the ventilation gap across the front. Made from quality H3 94x47 framing timber and finished with either zincalume or your choice of colorsteel.

Sheds can be made standard or to your individual requirements.

All sheds are made to order and individually priced - large & small we make them all!

Malcolm McDowell Drive, Ashburton Ph (03) 308 3595 Fax (03) 308 5649

Adams Sawmilling Co Ltd- Your local timber and fi rewood merchants -

Discussing trees for irrigated farms

An open workshop looking at tree plantings for irrigated

farms will be held in Mayfield on Thursday, May 1.

The Trees on Farms workshop is one of a national series, partially funded by the Ministry of Primary Industries and run in conjunction with the NZ Farm Forestry Association.

Aside from the aesthetic value, planting the right trees can significantly boost farm profits and management systems to provide multiple benefits.

These can include an income from timber, shade, shelter and fodder for livestock, soil conservation, enhanced water quality, and habitats for native wildlife.

The free one-day workshop will feature a combination of presentations, short videos and a field visit to showcase a local farm-forestry property. Irrigation NZ chief executive Andrew Curtis, along with farm advisers, regional council representatives and farm foresters will speak during the morning.

NZFFA Ashburton branch president Tom Corbett will show farm forestry in action on his irrigated mixed livestock and cropping farm

in the afternoon. “Trees are definitely back in fashion and these Trees on Farms workshops were most successful in the North Island last year,” Mr Corbett said.

“They attracted many farmers relatively new to

tree establishment and management. Now they are offered in the South Island.”

Time has been set aside to discuss best-practice options and management for different objectives.

All participants will receive

a resource pack with handouts, a DVD featuring the videos shown at the workshop and other relevant information.

An opportunity to join the New Zealand Farm Forestry Association at a discounted rate will also be offered.

Michelle Nelson

RURAL EDITOR

Tom Corbett’s Mayfield farm will be showcased at a Trees on Farms workshop on May 1.Photo Susan Sandys

Programme

May 1Mayfield Memorial Hall, Arundel-Rakaia Gorge Road.

9.45am Registration

10.15am Presentations

12.30pm Lunch

1-3pm Visit Tom Corbett’s property, 169 Somerville Road.

Page 26: Guardian Farming April 2014

Better Rural BroadbandFor over 2 years Ultimate broadband has been providing rural broadband,

offering great value & excellent service plus a range of smart solutions to keep our rural customers connected. We are a local Canterbury owned & operated company, all

of our customers are important to us, so if you are tired of being treated like a number by a big Telco or provider, call Ultimate broadband, we may be able to help!

ultimatebroadband.co.nz0800 000 945

*Ruralnet wireless *RBI wireless *UFB fibre *EA networks fibre *Wireless links *Farm networks

Talk to us today about a FREE ASSESSMENT

Our easy, affordable laser eye surgery could give you A NEW OUTLOOK ON LIFE.

Visit us online and you could

Ph 0800 52 73 71www.laservision.co.nz FASTFAST

• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • •

•• AFFORDABLEAFFORDABLE•• RELIABLERELIABLE••

BROADBAND INTERNET MADE EASY

Finally you can now get ultra-fast, reliable broadband internet delivered wirelessly to your rural location at an affordable price.CONTACT US P 0800 OUT YONDER (0800 688 966337) E [email protected]

Curious? Check out www.yonder.co.nz

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz26 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

Auction sparks interest in market

After the successful auction of Ealing Pastures last month

many people are asking: has the market ever been this hot and is that the best price ever paid for a farm in Mid-Canterbury?

To question one, the market this season from early August 2013 until now has taken a considerable lift from a year ago.

In the 2012/2013 season the market was sitting in the mid to late $40,000s per hectare. I think our top sale was about the $50,000 per hectare. For top end, quality units with good irrigation, rotary dairy shed and good improvements around the $47,000 to $48,000 per hectare price range was expected.

Remember last season’s milk payout was back a lot from this season as well.

This year sales seem to have started in the early $55,000 to $57,000 per hectare. There has been a sale at about $60,000

per hectare and just the other day I believe there was a sale around the $61,000 per hectare bracket.

So is the market hot? I guess it is, but I would call

it solid.

The price paid for Ealing Pastures, in my opinion, was that it was at market levels if you break down the property into dairy units and dairy support.

The thing that made it

such a large sale was that we sold three farms as if they were one. Normally the farms would have been spilt up and sold separately but as was ordered by the High Court they were to be sold as one hence the large block of ground and the high price.

However, having said that there are several farmers within Mid Canterbury that have equal to or more land held in their names but most are in several blocks.

I guess this just goes to show the strength of our local economy and our farming community.

It was a great sale and gave Property Brokers a good local and New Zealand wide promotion and coverage.

So now we are looking for the next opportunity.

Chris Murdoch

PROPERTY BROKERS

The auction of Ealing Pastures, run by Property Brokers, attracted much interest, both locally and nationally.

Page 27: Guardian Farming April 2014

StructureWiseDESIGN & CONSTRUCTION

Contact us today for a no obligation quote and

see how we can meet your requirements.

0800 115 000www.structurewise.co.nz

your requirements.

CHCH LOCAL (03) 324 3392

Sick of the mud?Sick of the mud?Sick of the mud?

Improved:• Profit

• Winter Production

• Effluent Management

• Cow comfort

• Staff Morale

WINTERING SHEDS!

Contact STEVE WATERS 027 640 1333 EMAIL [email protected]

• Rotary & Herringbone & Robotic Sheds• Feed Systems• Molasses’s Systems• PKE & Pellet Systems• Silos• Augers• Mills – New Generation –• Mineral Dispenser’s• Dust kits• Air Fluidizer Kits

www.permbrand.co.nz

‘And much more from the company that understands meal feeding.’

UNDER

OFFER

UNDER

OFFER

Page 28: Guardian Farming April 2014

If you are thinking about taking a holiday this winter, then now is the

time to start planning your break.

We are fortunate to have outstanding destinations within a short flying time from New Zealand. Rarotonga, Fiji, and Samoa to name a few – all with a great range of beaches, activities and accommodation options. Australia is always a favourite and there is a world of things to see and do beyond the eastern coast that attracts so many of us.

However – it is not just us kiwis that are attracted to

these countries as they are being sold across the world as preferred holiday locations, so if you are interested in a particular destination it pays to get in as early as you can to secure your place.

Every autumn/winter we have clients who for one reason or another leave it too late to make a booking and miss out. If you only have a narrow window of opportunity for a holiday you need to get in early.

Don’t wait for that last minute deal, because at that time of the year there won’t be one. The airlines need to

maximise their revenue so don’t let it be at your expense.

Alternatively, why not look at a cruise? You unpack once, and everything else is pretty much paid for – accommodation, meals,

entertainment during the day and at night, plus a range of shore excursions to choose from.

Or just stay on the ship by the pool and soak up the sun while you unwind.

If you are looking for something a bit longer, we still have space on our farm based Africa tour.

This leaves New Zealand on 19th May and will be fully escorted by Steve and Terri Lawson.

Although now resident in Ashburton they originate from that part of the world so know the places they visit intimately.

This year we are also offering a post tour extension to the Serengeti.

For those of you who can, or need to plan further ahead, next year I will be taking a group to Canada and Alaska. This will leave in June and highlights will include The Rocky Mountaineer, the Calgary Stampede and small boat cruising in Alaska.

We look forward to hearing from you, catching up with you in our office or talking to you at this year’s ATS In Store days.

Advertising feature

United Travel Ashburton (03) 308 8219

30 - 46 Tancred Street [email protected]

Take a Break when the

Cows are Dry It’s been a long year so time to take a well-earned break.

Imagine waking to the sound of the Pacific Ocean lapping at the shores. After a long relaxing sleep, you are ready for the delights that await in Fiji, the Cook Islands or Hawai’i.

What about a Pacific Cruise? Unpack, relax and enjoy one of the many all inclusive cruising options we have available.

Call in to United Travel Ashburton and speak to one of our experts today, we’d be happy to create the perfect escape - at the time of year that is all about you!

It pays to get in as early as you can to secure your place.

Discover the warmer side of winter

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz28 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

Cruise. Tahiti. Gold Coast.

Page 29: Guardian Farming April 2014

Full range of engineering supplies & accessories for all your repairs & maintenance.Kerrick Hot & Cold Waterblasters & Industrial Vacuum Cleaners. Esseti Welders & Accessories. Stockists and distributors of Trailer Equipment.Locally owned & operated family business for 61 years.

ASHBURTON

South Street, Ashburton PHONE (03) 308-3147 Fax (03) 308-1042

Email [email protected]

FREEPHONE 0800 452 522

Peter Blacklow

Call in and talk to the people that know!

Sue CahillKiwi Keith

GASLESS WIRE

SOLID WIRE

$89.57+GST

$25.22+GST

$45.22+GST

XCEL-ARC

.9mm 4.5kg

.9mm 5kg

.9mm 15kg

BLACKLOWS TRADEZONE ASHBURTON

HOT WELDING SPECIALS NOW ON 2 MONTHS ONLY WHILE STOCKS LAST

SOLID WIRE

+GST

$25.22+GST

.9mm 5kg

SUPER SAVINGS ON WELDERS AND WELDING ACCESSORIES

Call Phill 022 089 6224 | Email: [email protected]

WILCE ENGINEERINGPirtek has grown to

become the number one provider of fl uid transfer

soluti ons and on-site repairs. Specialising in hydraulic hoses, pipe fi tti ngs & coupling.

It off ers a comprehensive range of fl uid transfer soluti ons, products & services to industries

WILCE ENGINEERING Phone: 022 089 6224 Email: [email protected]

*EMERGENCY BREAKDOWN SERVICE *CERTIFIED WELDING

*FARM REPAIRS & MODIFICATIONS *GENERAL ENGINEERING

*TRANSPORT REPAIRS & MODIFICATIONS *ON SITE ENGINEERING *PIRTEK HOSE AND FITTINGS *24/7 CALLOUT SERVICE

*EARTHMOVING REPAIRS *MANUFACTURING

PH: 022 089 6224

Call Phill today to discuss all your engineering needs

• Emergency Breakdown Service • Certi fi ed Welding• Farm Repairs and Modifi cati ons • General Engineering• Transport Repairs & Modifi cati ons • On Site Engineering • Pirtek Hose and Fitti ngs • 24/7 Callout Service• Earthmoving Repairs • Manufacturing

29www.guardianonline.co.nz

Roar hunters urged to take care The Mountain Safety

Council is urging all hunters heading out for

this year’s Roar to think twice before pulling the trigger.

“No meat is better than no mate” is the mantra that all hunters should know and remember, Firearms and Hunter safety programme manager Nicole McKee said.

With increased hunting activity expected, especially on public land, now is a good time for hunters to refresh themselves of the seven basic rules of firearms safety, before going bush. “Identifying your target beyond all doubt is perhaps the most important rule at this time of year and should be second nature to all hunters,” Mrs McKee said.

Hunters should avoid firing at shape, colour, movement or sound. The advice is to be aware that under certain circumstances the brain can trick the eyes, so you should assume any shape, colour, movement or sound is a human until you can prove otherwise.

“Hunters should sight the head, neck and shoulder of the

animal all at the same time, or at least enough of the animal to positively confirm target identification. Make sure that what you are looking at is not

a fellow hunter carrying a dead animal,” Mrs McKee said

There are few non-intentional firearms incidents in New Zealand that lead to

injury or death. However, tragedies do occur and often they coincide with the roar.

Hunters should also take care when venturing in

tricky terrain. Slips and falls can occur at any time and whether deep in the bush, climbing a fence or obstacle or chasing that tahr on to a rocky outcrop, taking care of yourself is vital before taking the shot. Incidents involving hunters falling and shooting themselves or a companion have been reported in the past.

Rule three states that you should only load a firearm when ready to fire and make sure that you are in an area where it can be safely discharged. If game gets away, put the round back in the magazine and close the bolt on the empty chamber.

Lastly, wearing coloured clothing that contrasts with the environment (and deer) will help you to be seen by other hunters who may be in your area. However, the responsibility of target identification always lies in the hands of the person carrying the gun.

For more information about firearms safety, please visit the Mountain Safety Council website www.mountainsafety.org.nz/firearms

THE FIREARMS SAFETY CODE: Seven basic rules of safe firearms handling

1. Treat every firearm as loaded

Check every firearm yourself.Pass or accept only an open or unloaded firearm.

2. Always point firearms in a safe direction

Loaded or unloaded, always point the muzzle in a safe direction.

3. Load a firearm only when ready to fire

Load only the magazine after you reach your shooting area.Load the chamber only when ready to shoot.Completely unload before leaving the shooting area.

4. Identify your target beyond all doubt

Movement, colour, sound and shape can all deceive you.

Assume colour, shape, sound, and shape to be human until proven otherwise.

5. Check your firing zone

THINK! What may happen if you miss your target? What might you hit between you and the target or beyond?Do not fire when you know others are in your firing zone.

6. Store firearms and ammunition safely

When not in use, lock away the bolt, firearm and ammunition separately.Never leave firearms in a vehicle that is unattended.

7. Avoid alcohol and drugs when handling firearms

Good judgement is the key to safe use of firearms.

Page 30: Guardian Farming April 2014

115 Alford Forest Road, Ashburton 7700 • Ph (03) 308 9099

dpi 2

6963

/14

NEED A CALF SHED? ANY SIZE, SHAPE OR COLOUR -NO PROBLEM

Page 31: Guardian Farming April 2014

PMR are pleased to announce that they have been appointed the sole distributor for the range of Harvest International Augers in NZ.

Harvest Augers come in sizes from 8” through to 13” diameter and 32’ long up to 112’ long.

Harvest Augers are available with either hydraulic lift or winch lift, swing away hoppers or standard inlet hoppers.

HARVEST INTERNATIONAL AUGERS

Available to match all sizes of fan units. Fully automatic gas fi red, with computerised control. Single and double units available.

CROP DRYING FANS & CONSTANT HUMITY GAS BURNERS

• Flat bottomed or hopper.

• 10 tonnes to 10,000 tonnes.

• Can be fi tted with stirrers, drying fl oors and unload systems.

• Dairy Feed Systems now available.

GSI SILOS

PMR GRAIN SYSTEMS CROP STORAGE AND HANDLING SYSTEMS

Dairy Feed and

Crop Storage Specialists

Tel: 03 303 7266 | Web: www.pmr.org.nz | Email: [email protected] Mobile: 0274 151 390 | Email: [email protected] Mobile: 0275 146 609

Dairy Feed and

Crop Storage Specialists

MASTER DRIERS• Manual or fully

automatic sys-tems.

• Master dust extraction - in-creased bushel weight.

• Capacities from 10-40 ton.

• Mobile or static units.

• Tractor or electric drive.

31www.guardianonline.co.nz

Nutrient management is now at the forefront of farmer thinking. In

the past it has not been, but with nutrient-loss limits being set through regional plans, how farmers use and manage nutrients is now central.

The signals and stimulus, until Government’s 2011 National Policy Statement on Freshwater Management, were all about lifting produc-tion and improving perfor-mance, but this approach lacked environmental balance. So farmers cannot be blamed for not responding to non-existent pressures.

All farmers want to leave the land in a better state than when they begin and in many instances individual farmers have achieved good environmental performance. But collectively the impact of catchment or area-wide practices has led to problems in some areas. What is happening now is a co-ordinated approach which has the potential to deliver significant improvements.

The awareness that has been gained by pro-active intervention from primary industries has seen a gradual mind-set change.

Farmers and the primary sector should be congratulated

for their engagement. When we talk about

nutrient management – nitrate (N) and phosphorous (P) are the critical elements. It is well known that phosphorous is lost via attachment to soil particles. Nitrogen in soils goes through stages to finally become highly plant available but also highly soluble as nitrate. It’s then lost via drainage through a soil profile. The question becomes how do we manage our properties to minimise these losses? Overland flow is the key for P and drainage is the key for N.

A report completed for IrrigationNZ and Environment Canterbury by the Agribusiness Group looked at a range of land uses across irrigated and dry-

land properties and heavy and light soils comparing mitigation tools to minimise N and P losses. Using the Overseer model, the report found that improved irrigation management had the potential to reduce N losses significantly. Improvements were particularly evident on light soils, the most prone to rapid drainage with smaller water holding capacity.

IrrigationNZ has developed a training programme to assist farmers to irrigate more effectively. With the advent of Farm Environment Plans, irrigation management is a key component. The regime of accountability and justification of water application requires farmers to be proficient water managers.

IrrigationNZ has delivered 13 training days reaching more than 200 irrigators with great reviews. Information about the next irrigation manager training workshop in this area can be found on www.irrigationnz/training

As a sponsor of irrigation manager training workshops, DairyNZ plays a role in ensuring good management practice information is available.• Supplied by IrrigationNZ

Minimising nutrient loss

Smart irrigating can reduce nutrient loss.

IrrigationNZ has developed a training programme to assist farmers to irrigate more effectively.

Page 32: Guardian Farming April 2014

SAFER

SAFERRURALROADS

SAFERRURALROADS

RURAL

ROADS TREE TRIMMING

Are your trees looking shady?Trees can shade roads and footpaths causing ice in winter.

Make sure your trees are not making the road unsafe.

SAFER RURAL ROADS It’s your responsibility.

w w w.ashbur tondc.gov t.nz

ALPINE CLEARSPANBirdproofkitsetsheds

Phone now for a free brochure pack!

0800 428 453

 BIRD PROOF

 Solid and robust

 Protects your assets

 Free delivery na�onwide

 Galvanised box sec�on ra�ers www.alpinebuildings.co.nz

7 CASS STREET, ASHBURTON

Call Mid Canterbury Freight on 03 308 6573 and place

your order today.Don’t miss out!

Quality Calf BeddingGive your future the best startQuality Calf BeddingGive your future the best start

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz32 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

Success at the Glammies

Page 33: Guardian Farming April 2014

We build for industries. Starting with the primary ones.

COMMERCIAL•INDUSTRIAL•RURAL

At Calder Stewart we’ve never forgotten where we

started, building quality farm buildings for the Kiwi

farm industry. And over the course of the last 55

years of involvement, we’ve developed something

of a knack for it. Our dedicated team’s expertise

in constructing custom woolsheds, covered yards,

wintering sheds and state-of-the-art dairy sheds

ensures practicality, quality and a professional

build - matched to your exact farming needs.

We pride ourselves at being a Rural Design &

Build specialist and have gained a considerable

reputation in meeting the needs of many a farmer

over the years. Let us put our expertise to work for

you; call your nearest Calder Stewart Construction

Representative today and see how we can deliver

a farm building that suits.

(03) 307 6130211 Alford Forest Road, Ashburton

Donald Sutton

Premium Grade Construction Materials Used

Best Value-for-Money in the IndustryDurable & Rugged Design is Standard

Over 55 Years Farm Building ExperienceA Rural Design and Build Specialist

www.calderstewart.co.nzTo learn more visit our website:

33www.guardianonline.co.nz

It was third time lucky for Wairarapa farmers, Matt and Lynley Wyeth who

have scooped the award for the tastiest meat in the country.

At the Beef + Lamb New Zealand Golden Lamb Awards, known as the “Glammies”, they won the best of breed terminal cross for their primera/highlander lambs.

“We have entered the competition every year for the last three years and got fourth and fifth place, so it’s been amazing to win this year and be recognised at such a high level,” Mr Wyeth said.

More than 150 farmers from throughout the country entered the annual competition where all lamb entries were tested for taste, tenderness, succulence, colour, cooking loss, fluid loss, PH and yield.

Mr Wyeth says it was a very rigorous process, as they had to select 30 of their best highlander/primera lambs, which were then sent away for processing at Silver Fern Farms Takapau plant.

“It is amazing to win such a prestigious award but it’s not just about the placing for us, it proves consistency and we have the evidence that we are getting it right.”The couple own Springvalley Enterprises, which is a 1000-hectare hill country property that runs 12,500 stock units. They have 7000 highlander ewes, half of which they cross with primera rams and half with highlander rams. “Our breeder Focus Genetics deserves some credit for this achievement. We have been using these superior genetics for the past seven years and are really starting to see some good results” Mr Wyeth said. “We find that highlanders and primeras are the best performing breeds on our hill country, all the way to getting superior product out the gate. They taste good, they yield well and have amazing fertility.”

The Wyeths usually scan more than 200 per cent and dock close to 160 per cent, but this success isn’t achieved without hard work. They lamb their triplet ewes indoors to increase productivity.

“We scan about 1200 triplets so we have set up an indoor programme in our covered

yards. We bring the ewes in around their due dates and lamb them inside. Once they have lambed we leave them in a pen for 12 hours with their lambs. This gives the ewe the opportunity to really bond with her three lambs, so she is less likely to drop any,” Mrs Wyeth said.

In 2010 the couple lost

1000 lambs in bad weather and this event prompted them to change some of their practices.

“It was absolutely mortifying that we couldn’t do anything about it. So the following year we decided to lamb our triplets indoors and I began an orphan programme where I now bottle feed all our orphan lambs on the farm,” she said.

Mrs Wyeth says she can feed an orphan lamb for $34, so if the lamb sells well, there are still good profits to be made.

“Farming is not just about the money for us. We have moral obligations to ensure there is no waste and we aim to keep every lamb alive so we can be as productive as possible.”

Focus Genetics chief executive, Gavin Foulsham congratulated the Wyeths on their prestigious award.

“Matt and Lynley are making the most of our genetics with good on-farm management practices. Their award can be attributed to their hard work and consistent results on the farm.

“They’re certainly getting the best out of our highlander and primera breeds,” Mr Foulsham said.

Matt and Lynley Wyeth, from the Wairarapa, are this year’s Glammie winners.

Once they have lambed we leave them in a pen for 12 hours with their lambs. This gives the ewe the opportunity to really bond with her three lambs, so she is less likely to drop any.

Page 34: Guardian Farming April 2014

Broadway classic Chicago will hit stages in Ashburton next month,

showcasing talent from Mid Canterbury and further afield.

Variety of Theatre Ashburton members are working hard on the musical production after rehearsals kicked off in February.

Set in the legendary city amongst the razzle and dazzle of the 1920s jazz scene, Chicago tells the story of two rival vaudevillian murderesses.

It is based on actual murders which took place in the American city in 1924. The sensational stories were written about in 1926 by Maurine Dallas Watkins, a reporter for The Chicago Tribune. Her reporting famously focused on the farcical, cynical, and

sensational aspects of the two cases, the press and public interest, and the legal proceedings which followed.

She characterised the defendants as two attractive "jazz babies" claiming to be corrupted by men and liquor. There was Beulah, "beauty of the cell block", and Belva, "most stylish of Murderess Row”.

Both women, after months of press coverage in Chicago's seven daily papers were found not guilty, although Watkins was convinced they were.

The resulting musical Chicago is a satire on the corruption of a judicial system, the concept of the “celebrity criminal” and how the media can, at times, influence the

outcome of court cases.Playing the male lead role of

Billy Flynn, a stylish, energetic, persuasive and suave criminal lawyer, will be Christchurch school teacher Blair McHugh.

He has joined NASDA graduate Layna Hunt of Ashburton and Rakaia mum Megan Hamilton, in filling lead roles.Together with director Regan Jackson and musical director Luke Di Somma, both of Christchurch, choreographer Amber Bailey and a line-up of top performers, the trio will be aiming to create magic come opening tonight.

Chicago will stage May 17 and 18, and 20 to 24. Performances will be 7.30pm and the matinee at 2pm. All tickets are $55.

Event centre manager Roger Farr said the Variety Theatre had developed a brand of performance known for its high quality productions.

“And I’m certain that Chicago, one of my favourites, will be another huge success.

Ticket sales are already going well at this early stage so I’m picking another very big season for them,” Mr Farr said.

Book by Fred Ebb & Bob FosseMusic by John Kander Lyrics by Fred Ebb

Based on the play C H I C A G O by Maurine Dallas Watkins Director Musical Director Choreographer Regan Jackson Luke Di Somma Amber Bailey

www.varietytheatreashburton.co.nzBY ARRANGEMENT WITH ORiGiN THEATRICAL ON BEHALF OF SAMUEL FRENCH LTD

Variety Theatre Ashburton presents

MAY 17-24 2014AT THE ASHBURTON TRUST

EVENT CENTRE

TICKETS AVAILIBLE AT www.ateventcentre.co.nz

It is based on actual murders which took place in the American city in 1924

Chicago comes to Ashburton

2 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz28 Farming www.guardianonline.co.nz

Taking Chicago singers through their paces at rehearsals is musical director Luke Di Somma.

Photo Tetsuro Mitomo 190214-TM-121

Susan Sandys

Page 35: Guardian Farming April 2014

EXTENSIVE RANGE

CALL IN AND SEE US TODAY

of cultivation, PTO and agricultural parts available

CALL IN AND SEE US TODAY

NOW OPEN SATURDAY 8–12.30pm

239 Alford Forest Road

03 307 7445

www.euroagri.co.nz

35www.guardianonline.co.nz

Ashburton Marine177 Alford Forest Road

Phone: 308 5842Email: [email protected]

www.ashburtonmarine.co.nz

Operating for over 30 years as Mid Canterbury’s dedicated marine business.

WHEN YOU MENTION THIS ADVERT

10% OFF YOUR WINTER SERVICE

OFFER EXPIRES 31 MAY 2014

DONT LET YOUR PROFITS GO UP IN SMOKE

Call us today to fi nd a cost eff ective solution to your

insurance needs69 Tancred Street, Ashburton

DDI: 03 307 6890

Farmers’ confidence slips slightlyNew Zealand farmer

sentiment has eased from last year’s highs,

although it remains at robust levels, the latest Rabobank Rural Confidence Survey has shown.

Sentiment among horticulture producers is stronger than in the broader farming community likely due to a recovery in the kiwifruit industry following the PSA outbreak and stronger prices.

Completed early last month, the latest quarterly survey showed New Zealand farmer confidence eased this quarter with 42 per cent of the country’s farmers expecting the agricultural economy to improve in the next 12 months (compared to 56 per cent last quarter) while 13 per cent of farmers expect conditions to worsen (up from five per cent previously) and 44 per cent expect conditions to remain the same.

Rabobank New Zealand chief executive Ben Russell said the results largely reflected changes in the economic cycle with interest rates expected to increase and

the likelihood of some easing in commodity prices over the next 12 months.

“Confidence among New Zealand farmers has been strong over the past three quarters and while there has been some easing this quarter, there remains broad optimism and strong fundamentals in some sectors,” he said.

“The decline in confidence is likely related to an expectation among farmers that record high dairy prices have peaked, while interest rates are likely to increase, which may contribute to a flow-on effect across other sectors in the coming 12 months.”

The survey was completed before the announcement by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand on March 13 of an increase in the Official Cash Rate (OCR).

“The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has forecast increases in the OCR of two to 2.25 per cent before the end of 2015,” Mr Russell said. “This alone will significantly tighten cashflows for those farmers carrying significant debt and may modify decisions around

investment intentions.” While confidence eased

across all industries, horticulture producers were found to be the most optimistic with 58 per cent expecting the rural economy to improve in the year ahead.

Of those farmers expecting agricultural conditions to worsen, 42 per cent cited falling commodity prices (down from 54 per cent previously) followed by concerns about the rising New

Zealand dollar (22 per cent up from 14 per cent last quarter). Worries about government regulation/policy eased this quarter (from 22 per cent to five per cent).

Of the farmers expecting the rural economy to improve, 48 per cent cited rising commodity prices (down from 57 per cent) followed by confidence in overseas market conditions (stable at 34 per cent).

As confidence in the rural

economy eased this quarter so too did New Zealand farmers’ expectations for the performance of their own farm business with 46 per cent expecting business performance to improve over the next 12 months (from 55 per cent) while 11 per cent expect a deterioration (from six per cent last quarter).

Interestingly, New Zealand farmers’ assessment of their own business viability improved this quarter with more farmers (75 per cent) reporting confidence in the overall viability of their farm business (up from 67 per cent).

Mr Russell said the strengthening in the viability index was a result of the improved seasonal and market conditions experienced over several previous quarters.

“It’s a good sign that more farmers are self-reporting stronger viability in their business, which we put down to an improved cashflow position in 2014 following better seasonal conditions towards the end of 2013 and a lift in production levels,” Mr Russell said.

Kiwifruit farmers are optimistic about the coming year, according to the latest Rabobank farm survey.

Page 36: Guardian Farming April 2014

T6000 ELITE• Range topping 178 hp (max hp) model• 4 and 6 cylinder electronic common rail

fuel injection models• Active Electro Command™ transmission

offers 17F x 16R gears and 40 kph Eco or 50 kph speeds

T7• Range topping 268hp (boosted Hp)• 3x transmission choices, Range

Command™, Power Command™ or easy to use Auto Command™

• Fully integrated IntelliSteer™ Auto Guidance System

T8• Models from 257hp - 340hp (rated hp)• More power and productivity• Cab suspension• Maximum versatility• Long wheelbase for comfort and

agile performance• Low operating cost

T7T6000 ELITET6000 PLUS• T6020 – 4 cyl, 112hp. T6030 – 6 cyl,

117hp. T6070 – 6 cyl, 142hp• Mechanical fuel injection• Massive total oil flow of 120 L/min

T6000 PLUS

DEPOSIT = % OF RRP INCLUDING GST

2.35% 1.75% 0.95% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%4.65% 4.30% 3.85% 3.25% 2.45% 1.20% 0.00%5.50% 5.25% 4.95% 4.55% 3.95% 3.00% 1.55%5.95% 5.75% 5.55% 5.20% 4.75% 4.05% 2.85%6.20% 6.05% 5.85% 5.60% 5.20% 4.65% 3.65% Johnson Gluyas Tractors

Timaru: 252 Hilton Highway, PH 03 688 1133 Ashburton: 225 Alford Forest Road, PH 03 307 8330

www.johnsongluyas.co.nz

Dallys O’Neill(TIMARU)

027 688 3312

Graham Pooke(TIMARU)

0274 847 217

Nathan Bagrie(TIMARU)

0274 986 5240274 430 4530274 430 453

Michael Gallagher(ASHBURTON)

0274 410 0250274 410 025

Greg Risk(ASHBURTON)

T4• 55hp, 65hp and 75hp models available• Hydraulic PowerShuttleTM

Transmission 12x2• 4WD Front Axle• Absolute driving pleasure

T5• 99hp, 107hp and 114hp models

available• Full range of PTO speeds• Maximum versatility• 600hr service intervals

T6• 4 cyl, 110hp to 163 max Hp available, 4 models• 6 cyl, 116hp to 175 Max boost Hp, 3 models• ElectroCommandTM 40kph (50kph option)• SuperSteerTM front linkage: enhanced

manoeuvrability and super tight turning• Rich, flexible product offering customers

tailor-make their own tractors

NEW

MODEL

AVAILABLE

NOW

T5000• 96hp, 106hp &115hp models available• Available in ROPS or cab• Lightweight powerful and versatile

RUN OUT

SPECIAL

INDENT YOUR SPECIAL

ORDER NOW

FINANCE OPTIONS AVAILABLE

WHATEVER YOUR NEEDS NEW HOLLAND HAS IT COVERED

03 318 6934 021 1433 469

riverdown steelPhoneMobile

Contact Lucy Baker

EmailWebsite

[email protected]

multi purpose feeders• Steel Trough with drainage holes drilled in each corner.• Pre galvanised sheet metal trough with feed barrier surround

and full length skids for ease of movement. One side panel drops down for loading.

• Ideal for winter strip grazing!• 26 Feed spaces

Feed bin on skids

TO VIEW OUR FULL RANGE VISIT www.riverdownsteel.com

1370mm W x 1360mm H x 3050mm (10’0’’) L

rsrsrsrsrsrsrsrsrs$1550

+ GST*

• Ideal for hay and baleage it can be moved without leaving feed behind!

Sheep/Yearling feeder1525mm W x 1000mm H x 1630mm 5’4”) L

rsrsrsrsrsrsrsrsrs$540

+ GST*